โSep-10-2014 08:26 PM
โSep-16-2014 04:50 AM
โSep-15-2014 06:36 PM
PaulJ2 wrote:msmith1199 wrote:
I would not change them myself. I'd probably have them inspected. I did that with my original Michelins and was told they were fine. I ran them for 8 years and then replaced them. Looking back, what I should have done is just replaced the front ones and ran the rear tires for a while longer.
The real safety issue is a blow out on the front. A blow out on the rear isn't going to cause you to crash. It may tear up some fiberglass, but that's cover by insurance.
Agree with the above. I would replace the front tires for safety and go.
โSep-11-2014 09:54 AM
msmith1199 wrote:
I would not change them myself. I'd probably have them inspected. I did that with my original Michelins and was told they were fine. I ran them for 8 years and then replaced them. Looking back, what I should have done is just replaced the front ones and ran the rear tires for a while longer.
The real safety issue is a blow out on the front. A blow out on the rear isn't going to cause you to crash. It may tear up some fiberglass, but that's cover by insurance.
โSep-11-2014 09:47 AM
โSep-11-2014 08:58 AM
et2 wrote:
It sounds like your neighbor is interested and appreciates the good condition of the MH he's considering. Why jeopardize the whole thing on some (IMHO) very questionable tires. Why take the chance. Replace them and forget about it. If he's already trying to push the envelope on maintenance issues, maybe having a MH isn't the right thing for them.
Mine will be replaced after six years no matter what - sooner if needed.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โSep-11-2014 08:56 AM
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โSep-11-2014 07:42 AM
โSep-11-2014 07:33 AM
โSep-11-2014 06:33 AM
โSep-11-2014 06:25 AM
โSep-11-2014 05:54 AM
โSep-11-2014 04:42 AM
โSep-11-2014 04:34 AM
โSep-11-2014 04:12 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
I've mentioned this in another thread that explained how aging works. Tires are like a bowl of spaghetti with a good Italian tomato sauce. If the tires sit, all the sauce sinks to the bottom and is not mixed with the tire (the spaghetti).
Using the tires on a regular basis heats up the Italian feast and keeps the sauce mixed in with the tread making for an excellent Italian dinner. As the dinner sits with no heat, you get sticky dry noodles.
Order a new set of dinners!
MM.
โSep-10-2014 10:31 PM