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Michelin 22.5 tires

badboy368
Explorer
Explorer
Is anyone using the MICHELIN XZE2+ TIRES? If so, what is your opinion on these particular tires? I am looking to put these on my class A, but curious to see how they are and if they are worth the money.
40' pusher,350 turbo cat, pullin a 37' trailer haulin a drag car. oh yea baby
43 REPLIES 43

badboy368
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks to all who shared some good advice/preferences on tires. I finally went ahead and put the Michelins on, and so far I am really happy with them. It was only the ride home from the tire dealer, but I could surely tell a difference in the ride over the Goodyears. Camping World had a good sale on them, so I bought them and took them to a tire shop myself to have them mounted and balanced. So far so good ....thanks.:) (execpt the ones that chimed in on stuff that had nothing to do with tires):(
40' pusher,350 turbo cat, pullin a 37' trailer haulin a drag car. oh yea baby

js218
Explorer
Explorer
Yep have camped in every state at state parks, stayed at a place called Baja Sunrise Rv park in southern Baja Mexico ocean front campsite with hook ups $32.00 a night would highly recommend if you ever go to Mexico
2017 Haulmark 45' Super C 600hp, 12 speed I shift transmission, tandem drive axles, 3 stage engine brake, towing 26' trailer with an 08 explorer inside.
Jim

Chainwright
Explorer
Explorer
js218 wrote:
Stay at state parks and never a problem, did stay at a park in Baja Mexico with no problems. Not a big fan of RV parks.


Oh, I see. Interesting.

js218
Explorer
Explorer
Stay at state parks and never a problem, did stay at a park in Baja Mexico with no problems. Not a big fan of RV parks.
2017 Haulmark 45' Super C 600hp, 12 speed I shift transmission, tandem drive axles, 3 stage engine brake, towing 26' trailer with an 08 explorer inside.
Jim

Chainwright
Explorer
Explorer
js218 wrote:
^^^^ Small layover at property I own on Lake Tahoe Nevada get the rig serviced then heading north to roam around Canada for a couple of months. Yeah early retirement is awesome spent 4 years traveling around the world then I . discovered Super C rvs and the rest is history. Had one custom built by Haulmark to my specifications I'm a retired process engineer so I can be pretty anal but Haulmark built what I ordered spent 5 months waiting for it to be completed.


wow, Way cool. I've been travelling since I was 3, because of daddy's job. For a while I got tired of all the travelling and laid low for many yrs, but then I "Recoverd." LOL. Then I met my present wife and we've been travelling 10 yrs now. I wanted a Super Duper C too, but I learned that there are some CG's that only allow Class A's. Have you ever been turned away from a Class A only CG?

Mile_High
Explorer
Explorer
Chainwright wrote:
Mile High wrote:
chastho wrote:
I never see anyone mention Continental tires, I install them at less cost and are very good tires.
I would agree, but I just got talked out of them at a tire Dealer that sells them along with Michelin, Bridgestone, and Firestone. He said out of the 4, the Continentals would be his number 4 recommendation for a MH. I was looking at the EcoPlus HS3. His reasoning, and take it for what it is worth from a Dealer, is the Continental was more fickle for care and sensitive to pressures. Some drivers complained that after a 750 mile run the tread on the steer axles would start to show odd wear that forced them to rotate positions to save the tire.


I'm definitely not doubting anything you say or that your tire guy says. But tires that are sold on the U.S. market have to meet certain criteria and standards....By Law. Don't you find it hard to believe that Compared to the competition, Continental would be able to sell such a subpar/problematic tire? Personally I doubt The NHTSA would give their "blessing" to a tire that performed that way, compared to others. JMHO. What do you think?
Ya like I say, it was a tire dealer talking so take it for what it was worth. The next tire dealer may say something completely different. Standing there looking at 4 different tires that all look the same, you kind of struggle to hear any advice being offered.

As far as government approval - that doesn't give me a warm fuzzy at all - I read their daily recall emails on tires they previously approved, and coming from a 5th wheel with that nightmare of imported ST tire and blowouts, the comfort of US specifications and standards don't mean much to me.
2013 Winnebago Itasca Meridian 42E
2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara Towed

js218
Explorer
Explorer
^^^^ Small layover at property I own on Lake Tahoe Nevada get the rig serviced then heading north to roam around Canada for a couple of months. Yeah early retirement is awesome spent 4 years traveling around the world then I . discovered Super C rvs and the rest is history. Had one custom built by Haulmark to my specifications I'm a retired process engineer so I can be pretty anal but Haulmark built what I ordered spent 5 months waiting for it to be completed.
2017 Haulmark 45' Super C 600hp, 12 speed I shift transmission, tandem drive axles, 3 stage engine brake, towing 26' trailer with an 08 explorer inside.
Jim

Chainwright
Explorer
Explorer
js218 wrote:
^^^^ One of the benefits of early retirement been on the road since 10/16. Been to every state but Hawaii just left the Southern Baja peninsula on my way to Yellowknife Canada.



Wow that's soo cool. Yeah we don't go up north. We like it Hot. We go as far north as St. Goerge UT, then come back "down." lol. I retired at 45 so I know what you mean with early retirement.

js218
Explorer
Explorer
^^^^ One of the benefits of early retirement been on the road since 10/16. Been to every state but Hawaii just left the Southern Baja peninsula on my way to Yellowknife Canada.
2017 Haulmark 45' Super C 600hp, 12 speed I shift transmission, tandem drive axles, 3 stage engine brake, towing 26' trailer with an 08 explorer inside.
Jim

Chainwright
Explorer
Explorer
js218 wrote:
My Michelins are 3 years old with 135,000 miles on them will replace them at 150k.



LOL. 65K+ miles a year. Dang, sounds like Work. LOL, no thanks I'll stick to 6-8K a yr. 😄

Chainwright
Explorer
Explorer
MRUSA wrote:
The safety standards are MINIMUM standards. Just because all tires meet the minimum doesn’t mean they are all as good as each other. Some brands exceed the minimum standards, ride smoother, quieter, or last longer than others. My Michelins are going on 7 years old and still look like brand new. Not a crack on any of them and the tread looks perfect too. (At 35,000 miles they are hardly used.) They ride great, handle great, and are quiet. I will replace them soon due to age, and the new tires will be Michelins.


Hmm. I don't recall anyone saying that Michelin was not a "Fine" tire. You sound somewhat defensive there. lol. Am I reading you wrong? Believe me, I'd rather have Michelin's all around, but I Know I can get a good product, not "top of the line" for $3-4 thousand less. So that's what I choose. ESPECIALLY if I know that I'll have to replace the tires, because of AGE, before the tread wears out. My Michelins were 6 yrs old and loosing chunks after 18K miles, My rig is Garage kept. I'm not complaining, about them only lasting 18K miles, but after 6 yrs I knew it was time to replace them, especially when I noticed chunks of rubber missing. Michelin's are great if YOU over the life of the tire demand the "Max" or the "most" out of them. But the Average RV'er drives 4000- 4500 miles a yr, and the tires are supposed to be replaced on average every 3-6 yrs (every 12000 to 25000 miles!??!?!? that's not alot for a tire). So you are hardly using them to the "MAX" so why not get something that's "Good," instead of "the Best" or "great?"

Smitty77
Explorer
Explorer
Compare the weight of the XZE to other tires in the same size, they weight more. This is because they have sidewalls designed to handle the abuse of delivery and bus drivers, kissing the curb and other items over their usage life cycle.

We had the XZE* in 12R size for our first set of tires on our 40' DP. We lost the outside dual, and the tag on the passenger side due to impact on a fresh/deep/sharp edge pot hole (Would have probably sunk dow to the axle, but I think a VW was at the bottom of the whole!) on Hwy 99 North of Bakersfield. (Raining, in the right lane, and being passed by a convoy of trucks in the left lane, vehicles parked on the shoulder of the road. I saw what I thought was a pot hole, was able to slow down a bit, but took my foot off of the brake once I got the front end around the hole. Not able to do so on the rears:)!) It was a hard enough impact that I drove to the next safe place to pull off, about two miles up, and went out to inspect. I saw a bulge in the outside Dual, but did not see another, I'll say ripple, in the tag until the next day at the RV Park. Broken cord in one, and a slipped cord in the other. The TCI that I stopped at to have it looked over, dismounted both tires for inspection. First the Tire Tech, and about 5 minutes later when the Manager came to take a look stated basically the same thing. I was lucky the impact to the dual did not cause a blowout. It was the Manager said that it was because the XZE had the stronger sidewalls. (Unfortunately, they did not have the tires I needed in stock, and I elected to have them put back on and I kept my speed to 50-55, until I could get to a shop that had two replacements that were young enough to get. Put those on the steers, and moved the old steers to the damaged positions.

I like the XZE. That being said, the current set is the XZA2 in 295/80. Same load range, but quite a bit less weight, and higher efficiency. I went with them, because I was trying to reduce the front end road transfer from expansion joints, pot holes, DOT's, rough roads into the front passenger seats. I like these too.

The XZE*'s were replaced at just under age 7, no major cracking, some lite surface cracks around some of the stampings, along the meaty part of the sidewalls. I'll call them hairline cracks, not the kind that you see when others post pictures of sever cracking in tires.

I also would have zero reservations about using Toyo, Hankook, BF Goodrich tires. I just helped a friend choose new shoes. He went with the XZA2's on the steers, and Hankook AH37 on the rear position.

Lots of choices, best of luck on your decision,
Smitty

js218
Explorer
Explorer
My Michelins are 3 years old with 135,000 miles on them will replace them at 150k.
2017 Haulmark 45' Super C 600hp, 12 speed I shift transmission, tandem drive axles, 3 stage engine brake, towing 26' trailer with an 08 explorer inside.
Jim

MRUSA
Explorer
Explorer
The safety standards are MINIMUM standards. Just because all tires meet the minimum doesn’t mean they are all as good as each other. Some brands exceed the minimum standards, ride smoother, quieter, or last longer than others. My Michelins are going on 7 years old and still look like brand new. Not a crack on any of them and the tread looks perfect too. (At 35,000 miles they are hardly used.) They ride great, handle great, and are quiet. I will replace them soon due to age, and the new tires will be Michelins.
Marc, Wellington FL
2013 Entegra Anthem 44SL
2018 Lincoln MKX toad
EEZ-RV tire pressure monitor