Nov-26-2013 07:48 AM
Nov-29-2013 09:29 AM
Nov-29-2013 07:40 AM
Nov-29-2013 06:11 AM
Nov-29-2013 05:18 AM
Nov-29-2013 04:30 AM
rhagfo wrote:
I find that very hard to believe! LT's have a far stiffer sidewall one of the reasons many feel that using LT tires on a tandem axle trailer stress the tire too much when turning.
Nov-28-2013 06:35 PM
Nov-28-2013 11:55 AM
Me Again wrote:gmw photos wrote:
We can certainly hope that you are right about the dealer actually sending the tire back for evaluation.
gw
Once a case is open with the manufacturer, then there is a process that kicks in if the manufacturer request the tire to evaluate the failure. We are talking main line manufacturers like Goodyear, Michelin/BFG/Uniroyal, Bridgestone/Firestone etc. I firmly believe this process takes place as advertised!
Do Tredit or Tireco actually get tires shipped back? They do not have engineers on site as they are only middle men! Probably cheaper for them to have the tire store junk the tire and send out another tire. Their actually cost of the ST tires they import would be surprisingly low.
It would be interesting to know if Goodyear drop ships the Marathon ST directly to these two major suppliers of the trailer manufacturing companies. Large trailer manufacturers buy truck or train car loads of pre-mounted wheels and tires from them.
Chris
Nov-28-2013 08:40 AM
gmw photos wrote:
We can certainly hope that you are right about the dealer actually sending the tire back for evaluation.
gw
Nov-28-2013 06:59 AM
Me Again wrote:
gw, I believe you are wrong about returning tires. I had a friend have a BFG Commercial TA fail in Arizona this spring. The Discount Tire store in Mesa did all the paper work to return the tire. He said it was like a police report!!! This TA was not on the recall list.
BFG paid for a new tire and damage to his trailer, so taking time to work the process does have advantages to the consumer.
The big take away I get from Barry's post above is that most internet want to be experts do not know what WE are talking about most of the time. Yet some seem to run for forum to forum making post like they do know something.
Barry's " the most common cause is a deficiency in design " statement reads volumes into all the ST tire threads that appear repeatedly on here and other forums.
Now that Barry's has retired, maybe he will tell us which tire company he worked for? Chris
Nov-28-2013 06:45 AM
Nov-28-2013 06:20 AM
Nov-28-2013 03:56 AM
FastEagle wrote:
Tread separations don't just happen overnight. They are most often caused by some form of tire damage - inflicted or built-in - that will eventually cause the tire to fail completely.....
FastEagle wrote:
......A professional tire expert can determine the exact cause of the damage to the tires shown in the pictures.......
Nov-27-2013 04:12 PM
Nov-27-2013 03:39 PM
Atom Ant wrote:FastEagle wrote:So by "built-in" tire damage, do you mean poor assembly skills, inferior raw materials, inferior design, or just somebody dropped the cargo container on the pier!?
Tread separations don't just happen overnight. They are most often caused by some form of tire damage - inflicted or built-in - that will eventually cause the tire to fail completely.
FastEagle