โJan-20-2015 04:41 AM
โJan-26-2015 05:59 PM
โJan-26-2015 09:44 AM
Tireman9 wrote:JimM68 wrote:
There is a lot of discussion on this. And that is good, losing a tire in a violent manner is a scary and expensive thing.
I'm a technician, not an engineer. I gave up long ago wondering "WHY?" I want to know "what broke?" "how to fix it?" and hopefully on a very good day, "how to prevent it from happening again.
I've had 2 motorhomes over 7 years, and during that time I've lost 3 tires.
Today, I run a good tpms. I weighed my rig, checked my weight tables for my tires, and set my pressures at 5 lbs above minimum for the weight. I set the alarm on my tpms to 75% of my cold tire pressure. When / if the tpms alarmgoes off, I stop.
The last time I bought tires, I had them install solid metal valvestems, pointed out in all cases. My TST flow thru sensors screw right on the inner duals. The outer duals have 3" solid extensions then the (non flothru) sensors. and the fronts have non flo thru sensor screwed right onto the stems. This eliminated my previous problem of leaking extensions.
And now I just forget about my tires. Every spring coming out of storage, I check and adjust the air pressure, and the rest of the season I ignore them. Unless the TPMS alarm goes off.
Minor but important point. If your "cold" inflation is the MINIMUM needed to carry the known actual load they you might want to bump up the warning point on your TPMS. A tire that has lost 20% of it's required inflation is considered to be "flat" and driving on it will do irreversible internal structural damage. This damage might not make itself known for weeks or possibly many months but you will definately have shortened the tire life.
โJan-26-2015 07:46 AM
frankdamp wrote:
One of the big mistakes people make is to look at the max pressure molded into the sidewall and then use that as their inflation guide. Way too high and putting you at a much higher risk of a blow-out.
My approach is to buy good quality tires (we got Toyos), weigh the rig so you can figure out the individual axle weights when you're loaded for travelling, then inflate cold tires to the pressure the manufacturers' chart tells you. TPMS will give you a heart attack if you monitor what the pressure is while going 70 on the freeway in Arizona in the summer. Check it only when the rig has been sitting overnight and don't sweat it too much.
It really takes a lot of abuse to blow a tire. I worked in Boeing's landing gear group for a while, and we investigated an in-flight tire burst on a 727. It blew when the airplane was at about 12,000 ft, climbing out of Baltimore (I think). It punched an 18" diameter hole in the wheel-well pressure bulkhead and only a couple of USPS mailbags jamming in the hole prevented a disaster.
It turned out the airplane had taxied two miles with a dragging brake, then accelerated for take-off at close to maximum weight, needing about 150 mph for lift-off. After the gear was retracted, the heat build-up caused the failure, which was actually an explosion of gases that had been released from the tire compounds. The failure of the tire bead suggested an explosion pressure of about 12,000 psi. That's why airlines use nitrogen.
The "abuse" possible with an RV pales into insignificance. IMO, as long as you're within 15% of the pressure your weight calls for, don't sweat it. Being slightly under-inflated, based on a weigh-bridge check, is a lot better than being at the pressure shown on the tire's sidewall.
BTW, even after 47 years in the US, I still have trouble not spelling it "TYRE"! Fortunately spell checker alerts me.
โJan-26-2015 07:25 AM
Raymon wrote:
To Bikeboy57,
You stated "Moisture is the enemy of the steel belts." How does the steel belts become exposed to moisture when the belts are vulcanized between layers of rubber? In my opinion the steel belts only become exposed to moisture due to tire wear. If the belts become exposed they will rust which is not good. Also, steel belts exposed to brine created from applying salt to the roads during winter, not only rust, but corrode very quickly.
You also stated "Driving the tire and getting it up to temperature dissipates the moisture,..." What moisture are you referring to?
Ray
โJan-26-2015 07:21 AM
JimM68 wrote:
There is a lot of discussion on this. And that is good, losing a tire in a violent manner is a scary and expensive thing.
I'm a technician, not an engineer. I gave up long ago wondering "WHY?" I want to know "what broke?" "how to fix it?" and hopefully on a very good day, "how to prevent it from happening again.
I've had 2 motorhomes over 7 years, and during that time I've lost 3 tires.
Today, I run a good tpms. I weighed my rig, checked my weight tables for my tires, and set my pressures at 5 lbs above minimum for the weight. I set the alarm on my tpms to 75% of my cold tire pressure. When / if the tpms alarmgoes off, I stop.
The last time I bought tires, I had them install solid metal valvestems, pointed out in all cases. My TST flow thru sensors screw right on the inner duals. The outer duals have 3" solid extensions then the (non flothru) sensors. and the fronts have non flo thru sensor screwed right onto the stems. This eliminated my previous problem of leaking extensions.
And now I just forget about my tires. Every spring coming out of storage, I check and adjust the air pressure, and the rest of the season I ignore them. Unless the TPMS alarm goes off.
โJan-26-2015 07:09 AM
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 under-inflated. Why wouldn't you go by the chart?
โJan-26-2015 06:45 AM
mabynack wrote:
I feel the same way. My truck tires last 5 years before the tread wears out. Two of my FW tires had catastrophic failures within 100 miles and they were less than two years old and had less than 10,000 miles on them. I've had issues with tires in the past, so I check the pressures every morning before I start off. I run 65 mph or less on the highway. The last one blew out about a hundred miles into the trip and the sun was just coming up, so overheating and under-inflation weren't an issue.
I would like to go on a trip, but don't dare leave the driveway unless I have new tires on my FW.
โJan-22-2015 04:56 PM
frankdamp wrote:Very interesting post Frank, but why would inflating the tires to the max sidewall pressure be more prone for a blowout then under inflation?
One of the big mistakes people make is to look at the max pressure molded into the sidewall and then use that as their inflation guide. Way too high and putting you at a much higher risk of a blow-out.
My approach is to buy good quality tires (we got Toyos), weigh the rig so you can figure out the individual axle weights when you're loaded for travelling, then inflate cold tires to the pressure the manufacturers' chart tells you. TPMS will give you a heart attack if you monitor what the pressure is while going 70 on the freeway in Arizona in the summer. Check it only when the rig has been sitting overnight and don't sweat it too much.
It really takes a lot of abuse to blow a tire. I worked in Boeing's landing gear group for a while, and we investigated an in-flight tire burst on a 727. It blew when the airplane was at about 12,000 ft, climbing out of Baltimore (I think). It punched an 18" diameter hole in the wheel-well pressure bulkhead and only a couple of USPS mailbags jamming in the hole prevented a disaster.
It turned out the airplane had taxied two miles with a dragging brake, then accelerated for take-off at close to maximum weight, needing about 150 mph for lift-off. After the gear was retracted, the heat build-up caused the failure, which was actually an explosion of gases that had been released from the tire compounds. The failure of the tire bead suggested an explosion pressure of about 12,000 psi. That's why airlines use nitrogen.
The "abuse" possible with an RV pales into insignificance. IMO, as long as you're within 15% of the pressure your weight calls for, don't sweat it. Being slightly under-inflated, based on a weigh-bridge check, is a lot better than being at the pressure shown on the tire's sidewall.
BTW, even after 47 years in the US, I still have trouble not spelling it "TYRE"! Fortunately spell checker alerts me.
โJan-22-2015 04:20 PM
Raymon wrote:
To Bikeboy57,
You stated "Moisture is the enemy of the steel belts." How does the steel belts become exposed to moisture when the belts are vulcanized between layers of rubber? In my opinion the steel belts only become exposed to moisture due to tire wear. If the belts become exposed they will rust which is not good. Also, steel belts exposed to brine created from applying salt to the roads during winter, not only rust, but corrode very quickly.
You also stated "Driving the tire and getting it up to temperature dissipates the moisture,..." What moisture are you referring to?
Ray
โJan-21-2015 06:51 PM
โJan-21-2015 03:09 PM
JimM68 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:JimM68 wrote:
I set the alarm on my tpms to 75% of my cold tire pressure. When / if the tpms alarmgoes off, I stop.
Are you saying that when your tires which would have a 100psi cold tire pressure leak down to 75psi, you stop? In other words 25 psi below the minimum cold tire pressure.
You're kidding, right? :h
I am not kidding. My tires do not lose any air, not ever, unless a failure is in progress. I do of course monitor the TPMS always. The air pressure on these tires fluctuates a LOT. Depending on outside air temp, and if the tires are hot or cold, pressure changes are crazy.
In this bus, with the new sumitomo's I put on a few years ago, I only have needed to put air in the tires in the spring coming out of storage. I credit that to getting rid of the extenders, they've been known to leak...lol. just a bit. sometimes...
I'm not running around chasing my air pressures. 110 / 95 cold tires at 70 ish ambient is good. All the fluctuations, I don't chase them.
โJan-21-2015 01:09 PM
โJan-21-2015 09:40 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:JimM68 wrote:
I set the alarm on my tpms to 75% of my cold tire pressure. When / if the tpms alarmgoes off, I stop.
Are you saying that when your tires which would have a 100psi cold tire pressure leak down to 75psi, you stop? In other words 25 psi below the minimum cold tire pressure.
You're kidding, right? :h
โJan-21-2015 06:42 AM