โJan-20-2015 04:41 AM
โJan-20-2015 09:20 AM
โJan-20-2015 09:15 AM
โJan-20-2015 09:07 AM
โJan-20-2015 08:05 AM
โJan-20-2015 07:42 AM
โJan-20-2015 07:38 AM
โJan-20-2015 06:50 AM
โJan-20-2015 06:43 AM
10forty2 wrote:
I know I will roust the ire of many a tire aficionado, as well as those who will claim expert knowledge from years of traveling and RV'ing and quasi-engineering or actual engineering status/certification....I assure you I mean nothing personal towards anyone and I don't mean to walk on the waters of your knowledge because I have and will benefit immensely from it..... BUT with that said....
Are our tires really that sensitive? I mean, these things cost $400-$1K each and we talk about and treat them like they are made of glass or fine crystal. I certainly understand the need to ensure safety by checking certain parameters, but honestly? I must admit, after 2 tire failures within 2 months of each other, I'm a bit paranoid, myself. The first was just an old tire that I failed to verify its age when I bought the coach...my fault. The second was a new tire but turned out to be a factory defect....it happens from time to time with anything a human-being manufactures.
But can it really be so critical that the pressure stay within 1-psi of the recommended "weight table?" Do we need to have professional scales in our basement bins so we can weigh each wheel every time before we pull out so we know exactly what pressure the tire should have? And if we do, should we have two identical sets of scales so that we can leave one in the basement bin where the other one stays so we know exactly how much it weighs? Should I calculate how much weight I will gain over the course of my vacation depending on how well I eat so I know how much to compensate the air pressure? Do I have to become a meteorologist so I can predict the temperature of the places I travel so I can ensure that I have the proper pressure for the weight that I measured in that climate?
I admit it... I'm a Class A Newbie, but it just can't be this complicated...can it?
Your discussions please....:?
โJan-20-2015 06:38 AM
amandasgramma wrote:
My husband's opinion, and he's been "into cars" for almost 65 yrs, believes people are the cause of tire problems. 1) factory defect, 2) overloading the rig, 3) old tires, and 4) axle alignment problems. The last one has caused our friends to pay for many tires. They had an axle break on their TT. It was "welded" back together, but looking at it, you can see the tires aren't lined up right.....
The idea of scales on each wheel area is good......but don't see that happening. We pull into weigh stations that aren't open and weigh our rig.
You're overthinking the weather thing/air pressure....:) Relax, enjoy. After 45-50 yrs of traveling, we've not had a tire blow yet on a rig.
oh --- I KNOW there will be someone that comes on here and says I'm all wrong.. You'll get 1000 different ideas..... ๐ This is just our opinions.
โJan-20-2015 06:36 AM
bluwtr49 wrote:
Going out on a bit of a limb here but if you look through the multitude of posts on this subject you may notice that two brands stand out when the variety of different issues are discussed. Since both of these tires are supposedly designed specifically for the RV market it would suggest that the brand of tire you happen to be running may be more sensitive than others.
You might also form the opinion that if tires are going to be replaced on a time schedule it might be wise to buy the least expensive as possible since the incidence of failure appear to less than the high priced items.
โJan-20-2015 06:26 AM
bluwtr49 wrote:
Going out on a bit of a limb here but if you look through the multitude of posts on this subject you may notice that two brands stand out when the variety of different issues are discussed. Since both of these tires are supposedly designed specifically for the RV market it would suggest that the brand of tire you happen to be running may be more sensitive than others.
You might also form the opinion that if tires are going to be replaced on a time schedule it might be wise to buy the least expensive as possible since the incidence of failure appear to less than the high priced items.
โJan-20-2015 06:21 AM
โJan-20-2015 06:02 AM
Bikeboy57 wrote:
Good Morning.
I am a certified engineer, although not a tire engineer. My career was in the manufacture of medical devices where safety is of paramount concern. The load inflation tables were generated by hours of testing by lab rat engineers where the design of the tire was verified to meet safety requirements. What that means is that the tire was tested at the load, inflation, and speed listed in the inflation table and met or exceeded the requirements. If you ask the engineer what would happen if you deviate from the load inflation, you will get two answers. One, sponsored by the company attorneys and the prudent answer, is I don't have any data to predict what will happen sir. The second off the record answer is likely to be, higher inflation pressures over what is recommended in the table do not degrade safety, and inflation pressures below recommended for the load degrade safety performance in proportion to how much lower than recommended the tire is inflated. That being said, ambient air temperature, driving speed, road surface, age of tire, and history of tire all factor in to it's safety. No one can generate a accurate predictor using all those factors of what a tire may or may not do.
Given the high consequences of a blow out on a truck tire, the easy no worries approach is inflate them to the max pressure on the sidewall, weigh the coach to ensure it doesn't exceed the load rating, and replace them every five years.
However, higher than needed inflation pressures make the coach ride rougher and handle less than ideal. Replacement intervals can very widely. A tire could have less than a 100 miles but have been setting in the full Florida sun on wet sand when compared to a five year old tire with 50,000 miles that had been driven weekly. If there are no cracks in the high mileage tire, it may be more safe than the one that has not been driven. Moisture is the enemy of the steel belts. UV light is the enemy of the rubber. Driving the tire and getting it up to temperature dissipates the moisture, and causes UV protectants to bloom to the surface of the tire.
By far the biggest danger is running an underinflated tire for the load. In order to prevent that, one should know the load and the minimum inflation, plus check it periodically. Some invest in pressure monitoring systems to help them. Some use a tire gauge.
I add a third safety measure, and I see from your other posts you have invested in an IR thermometer. At each stop, I walk the coach and toad checking tire temperatures with my hand. I am looking for a tire that is hotter than the rest which would be one's early indication of underinflation.
No, they are not made of crystal. And the world does not come to an end if you are off a few psi one way or the other. Besides, it would be comical to test an array of tire gauges at the pressures we run to see how they compare to each other.
Sorry for the long discourse.
โJan-20-2015 06:02 AM
wolfe10 wrote:Effy wrote:mike brez wrote:
I weighed my rig once loaded up how it will travel. Inflated tires 5lbs over what inflation chart says for my weights. Check them every time before we leave. Have a tire pressure monitor system of some sort. At home when we park we park on rubber mud flaps.we don't cover our tires but is most likely a good idea.
Never understood the 5-10 PSi over the chart thing I see on here all the time. Why? If the chart says at x weight adjust to Y PSI, why would you go over? 10 miles down the road once they heat up now you are way outside the parameters specifically outlined in the chart. I don't get it. Over inflated tires can be just as bad as underinflated. Why wouldn't you go by the chart?
Understanding what the tire charts represent explains it all. They give the MINIMUM PSI for a given weight. Said another way, if it weighs more, the chart moves you to a higher PSI.
To keep from over-complicating PSI, most of us take the minimum and add 5-10 PSI to account for: cold fronts (lower temperatures), that big shopping trip, extra guests, full tanks, etc.
โJan-20-2015 05:55 AM