โSep-18-2014 07:39 PM
โSep-23-2014 09:54 AM
Yellowboat. wrote:
Les Schwab in Washington State put a new set of Bridgestone 19.5 tires on our motor home. I decided upon the Bridgestone tires because the date code was only 3 months old. With my new Bridgestone tires my motor home became very squirrely to drive. First trip on our new tires was to the coast. Because we were taking our grandchildren my wife drove some of the kids in our Dodge Durango and I drove the rest in the motor home. On the way to the coast, not towing, our motor home would dodge and swerve as we drove down the road. The first time my wife road in our motor home after installing the new Bridgestone tires she was scared to death.
I weighed my coach and adjusted air pressure to meet Bridgestone tire pressurization charts. Les Schwab had inflated the tires to the max pressure. Adjusting pressure did not help. I had a steering stabilizer and rear trac bar added. My coach came with a front trac bar installed. The suspension mods made our coach drive a little better but it was still squirrely and would dodge either left or right whenever it decided too. After a few local trips we headed south for the winter. As we headed south our coach started behaving better. We took I-5 south through Oregon and California. After spending some time near LA and San Diego we moved on to Tucson, AZ. The last time our coach lurched was as we were driving into Tucson. Returning home from Tucson our coach drove great and it is still driving just fine.
I sent an e-mail to Bridgestone but they never answered. I asked Les Schwab and they could not give an answer. I have posted on forums and asked RV industry experts but no one can give me an answer.
My guess is that either the tires needed time to allow the rubber to age as they were only 3 months old when they were installed or the tires needed to be driven to break them in. I have never heard of either of my explanations.
Safe travels.
JD
โSep-23-2014 09:49 AM
โSep-23-2014 08:19 AM
โSep-23-2014 07:20 AM
โSep-22-2014 06:01 PM
rtz549 wrote:
Look at any semi or other large truck. If they run any other tire; they will still have Michelins on the front. That's the one place you don't want a blow out.
โSep-22-2014 05:46 AM
โSep-21-2014 12:30 PM
โSep-20-2014 04:58 PM
โSep-20-2014 02:09 PM
TexasShadow wrote:
In my opinion you can't buy a better tire than Bridgestone not a fan of Firestone.
Bill
โSep-20-2014 11:41 AM
โSep-19-2014 04:20 PM
Yellowboat. wrote:That's bad customer service from Bridgestone Tire JD, when they don't have the courtesy to respond, especially if they don't know the answer.
Les Schwab in Washington State put a new set of Bridgestone 19.5 tires on our motor home. I decided upon the Bridgestone tires because the date code was only 3 months old. With my new Bridgestone tires my motor home became very squirrely to drive. First trip on our new tires was to the coast. Because we were taking our grandchildren my wife drove some of the kids in our Dodge Durango and I drove the rest in the motor home. On the way to the coast, not towing, our motor home would dodge and swerve as we drove down the road. The first time my wife road in our motor home after installing the new Bridgestone tires she was scared to death.
I weighed my coach and adjusted air pressure to meet Bridgestone tire pressurization charts. Les Schwab had inflated the tires to the max pressure. Adjusting pressure did not help. I had a steering stabilizer and rear trac bar added. My coach came with a front trac bar installed. The suspension mods made our coach drive a little better but it was still squirrely and would dodge either left or right whenever it decided too. After a few local trips we headed south for the winter. As we headed south our coach started behaving better. We took I-5 south through Oregon and California. After spending some time near LA and San Diego we moved on to Tucson, AZ. The last time our coach lurched was as we were driving into Tucson. Returning home from Tucson our coach drove great and it is still driving just fine.
I sent an e-mail to Bridgestone but they never answered. I asked Les Schwab and they could not give an answer. I have posted on forums and asked RV industry experts but no one can give me an answer.
My guess is that either the tires needed time to allow the rubber to age as they were only 3 months old when they were installed or the tires needed to be driven to break them in. I have never heard of either of my explanations.
Safe travels.
JD
โSep-19-2014 04:08 PM
โSep-19-2014 03:50 PM
Jerry M wrote:
It's time for new tires on the MH. 275/70R 22.5. I stopped by our local Les Schwab tire store today to ask about the FMCA Michelin Advntage program. After explaining it to me, he said that he has sold a lot of the Bridgestone/Firestone tires lately. From what I can find out, there is a savings of about $800 on the out the door price between the Bridgestone/Firestone over the Michelin tires. Does anybody have any experience with these Bridgestone/Firestone tires or have any comments on them?
Jerry
โSep-19-2014 12:45 PM