โSep-27-2021 07:02 PM
โOct-02-2021 08:46 PM
whemme wrote:RambleOnNW wrote:But the Michelin 225/75-R16C is not an E rated tire. You are trying to compare apples to oranges.whemme wrote:
Sorry to say but all E rated tires of a certain size by any brand have the exact same max load carrying capacity when inflated to 80 psi.
Actually not. You can see from the Michelin load tables that the dual application of the C-Metric 225/75-R16C has 1000 lbs. more per pair or 2000 lbs. more per 4 rear tires at 80 psi. 5950 vs. 4940 lbs. per pair.
https://www.rvsafety.com/images/pdf/michelinloadandinflationrvtruck.pdf
โOct-01-2021 02:37 PM
whemme wrote:RambleOnNW wrote:But the Michelin 225/75-R16C is not an E rated tire. You are trying to compare apples to oranges.whemme wrote:
Sorry to say but all E rated tires of a certain size by any brand have the exact same max load carrying capacity when inflated to 80 psi.
Actually not. You can see from the Michelin load tables that the dual application of the C-Metric 225/75-R16C has 1000 lbs. more per pair or 2000 lbs. more per 4 rear tires at 80 psi. 5950 vs. 4940 lbs. per pair.
https://www.rvsafety.com/images/pdf/michelinloadandinflationrvtruck.pdf
โOct-01-2021 02:08 PM
RambleOnNW wrote:But the Michelin 225/75-R16C is not an E rated tire. You are trying to compare apples to oranges.whemme wrote:
Sorry to say but all E rated tires of a certain size by any brand have the exact same max load carrying capacity when inflated to 80 psi.
Actually not. You can see from the Michelin load tables that the dual application of the C-Metric 225/75-R16C has 1000 lbs. more per pair or 2000 lbs. more per 4 rear tires at 80 psi. 5950 vs. 4940 lbs. per pair.
https://www.rvsafety.com/images/pdf/michelinloadandinflationrvtruck.pdf
โSep-30-2021 06:05 PM
RambleOnNW wrote:whemme wrote:
Sorry to say but all E rated tires of a certain size by any brand have the exact same max load carrying capacity when inflated to 80 psi.
Actually not. You can see from the Michelin load tables that the dual application of the C-Metric 225/75-R16C has 1000 lbs. more per pair or 2000 lbs. more per 4 rear tires at 80 psi. 5950 vs. 4940 lbs. per pair.
https://www.rvsafety.com/images/pdf/michelinloadandinflationrvtruck.pdf
โSep-30-2021 06:01 PM
RambleOnNW wrote:Holiday27 wrote:
I think I'm sold on these. The weight capacity seems pretty great and price is ok. Capacity appears higher that regular E rated tire maybe due to commercial rating.
Michelin - Agilis CrossClimate 225/75R16C 121/120R LRE
https://tires.costco.com/product?ItemNo=1331851
I looked at those too and it will be interesting to hear how they turn out. Those tires check a lot of boxes, sidewall protection, true all-season with Mountain snowflake winter rating, weight rating. Note that the C-Metric version has a directional tread whereas the non-C metric version does not. So each dual set of wheels will have to have a left and right tire? What to use for a spare, a non- C-metric Agilis?
For me it was go with what you know. Bridgestone all-steel cased tires were dependable for 8 years and the tire weight of 51 pounds.
โSep-30-2021 05:36 PM
whemme wrote:
Sorry to say but all E rated tires of a certain size by any brand have the exact same max load carrying capacity when inflated to 80 psi.
โSep-30-2021 05:29 PM
bobndot wrote:All of the issues I've had with the toyos have been separations (4 in all over 8+- years). 1 was after only 500mi!. So honestly, I'm over toyos. Time to try something new for me.
I understand how you feel regarding โmoving onโ. The Cross Climate seem to be a vg choice with the @3100# rating.
Were those previous 4 separated tires from the same purchase ? Over 8 years ?
If so, that could have a bad lot. Mfg defect or age ?
Tire separation is normally mfg related but can be heat, PSI or age related which can and has occurred most all tire brands including Michelin.
โSep-30-2021 03:32 PM
โSep-30-2021 03:18 PM
Holiday27 wrote:
I think I'm sold on these. The weight capacity seems pretty great and price is ok. Capacity appears higher that regular E rated tire maybe due to commercial rating.
Michelin - Agilis CrossClimate 225/75R16C 121/120R LRE
https://tires.costco.com/product?ItemNo=1331851
โSep-30-2021 02:58 PM
BFL13 wrote:
"With E rated tires (which is what the manufacturer recommends), if the rear axle is at max load there is very little extra weight margin and my opinion is that the tires are being stressed"
Wait a sec. Are you saying the actual rear axle weight on the scales is enough to max out the Es? Or are you saying the Es are not enough to meet the rear GAWR of the C?
What is the rear scale weight for that C as loaded for camping and what PSI do they want on the door label ?
โSep-30-2021 07:16 AM
All of the issues I've had with the toyos have been separations (4 in all over 8+- years). 1 was after only 500mi!. So honestly, I'm over toyos. Time to try something new for me.
โSep-29-2021 08:45 PM
โSep-28-2021 07:14 PM
rjstractor wrote:BFL13 wrote:
"With E rated tires (which is what the manufacturer recommends), if the rear axle is at max load there is very little extra weight margin and my opinion is that the tires are being stressed"
Wait a sec. Are you saying the actual rear axle weight on the scales is enough to max out the Es? Or are you saying the Es are not enough to meet the rear GAWR of the C?
What is the rear scale weight for that C as loaded for camping and what PSI do they want on the door label ?
If the OP has an E450 based C, at the max RGAWR the E rated tires are also right at their max. With most of these rigs there is very little air space in the wheel wells which makes the tires run hot and prone to tread separation in hot weather. Your E350 C is lighter, so if you run E rated tires you can inflate to 80 psi and have a comfortable margin. A 450 runs the same size tires, but has no margin tire-wise when fully loaded. If the OP wants real margin in tire capacity, he can go with a Rickson tire and wheel package but they are spendy.
โSep-28-2021 07:02 PM
SJ-Chris wrote:
On my 30' Class C RVs, I have made the choice to go away from the E rated tires and instead go with Commercial tires with a 121/120 weight rating. I buy my tires from Big-O tires and they don't seem to be any more expensive (~$20 more per tire).
With E rated tires (which is what the manufacturer recommends), if the rear axle is at max load there is very little extra weight margin and my opinion is that the tires are being stressed (...especially if they ever end up not being properly inflated). Tires at their max load MUST have a higher chance of a blowout, right? With Commercial 121/120 load rated tires, they give you an extra ~2000lbs of carrying capacity (compared to E rated tires) on your rear axle and I sleep better at night knowing this.
I just bought 7 new Commercial rated tires last week for one of my 30' RVs. The tires were $135 each.
Personally, I haven't noticed any difference in terms of handling or noise.
-Chris
โSep-28-2021 06:51 PM
BFL13 wrote:
"With E rated tires (which is what the manufacturer recommends), if the rear axle is at max load there is very little extra weight margin and my opinion is that the tires are being stressed"
Wait a sec. Are you saying the actual rear axle weight on the scales is enough to max out the Es? Or are you saying the Es are not enough to meet the rear GAWR of the C?
What is the rear scale weight for that C as loaded for camping and what PSI do they want on the door label ?