โOct-30-2021 03:30 PM
โNov-01-2021 07:40 AM
LouLawrence wrote:
No siping. Run the tire the way it was designed.
โNov-01-2021 04:34 AM
KendallP wrote:toedtoes wrote:
I'm not missing the point. I just don't see why anyone would consider this....
...If the tires are not appropriate or satisfactory for the vehicle/conditions, then siping will not make them suddenly appropriate or satisfactory. The only solution for that is to replace them with different tires.
If the Michelin tires are siped by the manufacturer, then I would contact them and ask why they need to sipe them before making a decision. If they are siped aftermarket but before purchase, then I would not buy from that shop.
I guess I thought the point was clear.
The Michelins... are the OEM. And the OEM tread. They are siped.
BUT... they are known to be of poor quality. And not because of the siping.
The Toyos are considered to be (by motorhome owners)... one of the best replacements. But they are not the same tire... nor tread... as the OEM. They are really a commercial steer / trailer tire. Great for steers. But less than ideal for drives.
There is no ideal choice here. There is no "solution... to replace them (the Toyos) with different tires." The unique size leaves fewer than usual options. One can have a "best" solution without it being an ideal one.
.
โOct-31-2021 04:41 PM
โOct-31-2021 03:33 PM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
Here is something about tire siping with factory and aftermarket. I can assure you that neither Michelin, nor any other tire brand, cuts their tires after they are molded. Tire siping
โOct-31-2021 01:23 PM
โOct-31-2021 01:09 PM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
From a tire warehouse dealer:
Aftermarket siping can void manufacturerโs treadwear warranty. Also, while siping might provide some nominal increases in traction, you are much better off spending the extra money you would have spent on that service on better tires with appropriate siping and tread.
Aftermarket siping may decrease the tread life of your tire. The engineering, high level of construction of the rubber compound and manufacturing process ensure that pre-molded sipes in the tread do not work against the expected tread life of the tire. Siping itself also reduces dry road performance as it increases tread squirm, tread wear, road noise and reduces gas mileage.
The Michelin tires have pre-molded sipes which were designed as part of the overall tire tread.
โOct-31-2021 12:56 PM
toedtoes wrote:
Ah! So you bought the RV with factory siped Michelins already on it. And are deciding to replace with the same (factory siped michelins) or Toyos.
In that case, my last comment stands. I would question Michelin as to why they sipe their own tires. Is it done in accordance with their engineers to provide the best tire? Or is it a cheap fix for an engineering mistake?
My guess would be the latter.
โOct-31-2021 12:49 PM
โOct-31-2021 11:32 AM
KendallP wrote:toedtoes wrote:
I'm not missing the point. I just don't see why anyone would consider this....
...If the tires are not appropriate or satisfactory for the vehicle/conditions, then siping will not make them suddenly appropriate or satisfactory. The only solution for that is to replace them with different tires.
If the Michelin tires are siped by the manufacturer, then I would contact them and ask why they need to sipe them before making a decision. If they are siped aftermarket but before purchase, then I would not buy from that shop.
I guess I thought the point was clear.
The Michelins... are the OEM. And the OEM tread. They are siped.
BUT... they are known to be of poor quality. And not because of the siping.
The Toyos are considered to be (by motorhome owners)... one of the best replacements. But they are not the same tire... nor tread... as the OEM. They are really a commercial steer / trailer tire. Great for steers. But less than ideal for drives.
There is no ideal choice here. There is no "solution... to replace them (the Toyos) with different tires." The unique size leaves fewer than usual options. One can have a "best" solution without it being an ideal one.
.
โOct-31-2021 08:45 AM
Walaby wrote:
x3.
I agree with Toedtoes and valhalla.
But re-reading your OP for the second or third time, my impression is you're looking for validation for a decision you've already made. If so, just do it. No need to explain to us the decision.
Curious how an aftermarket business who does the siping (Les Schwab) can be held to the original manufacturer's (Michelin's). If you get them to agree, kudo's to you.
Good luck with your decision.
Mike
โOct-31-2021 08:38 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
Got to agree with toedtoes on this one.
Unless you are aware of a design defect that siping corrects, they would have siped them at the factory if it was needed.
โOct-31-2021 08:37 AM
toedtoes wrote:
I'm not missing the point. I just don't see why anyone would consider this....
...If the tires are not appropriate or satisfactory for the vehicle/conditions, then siping will not make them suddenly appropriate or satisfactory. The only solution for that is to replace them with different tires.
If the Michelin tires are siped by the manufacturer, then I would contact them and ask why they need to sipe them before making a decision. If they are siped aftermarket but before purchase, then I would not buy from that shop.
โOct-31-2021 08:21 AM
โOct-31-2021 07:57 AM
โOct-31-2021 02:54 AM
KendallP wrote:toedtoes wrote:
So, you buy tires that were carefully researched and developed by the manufacterer and someone at a tire shop recommends they make a bunch of slashes in the tire to make it work better...
If the tire isn't performing to standards, get new tires.
Respectfully, you missed the point. No one said the tire isn't performing to standards.
It's all in the OP.