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A cause for tire blowouts?

Winged_One
Explorer
Explorer
I was on the I-69 the other day, tooling along at my typical 71/72 mph. I had 2 trucks pass me pulling trailers that were obviously being delivered (DOT markings on the trucks, etc). They just eased by me, but must have been doing about 74/75 mph.

This was not the first time this has happened, but it got me wondering.

Are these 65mph tires being damaged during transport. People say their new trailer was properly aired, not overloaded, not speeding, yet they have a blowout. Were their tires damaged, a time bomb, from the day they picked it up from the dealer?
2013 F350 6.7 DRW SC Lariat
2011 Brookstone 354TS
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robrose1
Explorer II
Explorer II
I believe that uhaul runs a bias tire on their trailers. They also post do not tow over 45mph all over the trailer.
Rob and Rose
2013 Winnebago Lite Five 29FWRLS
2006 GMC DURAMAX/ALLISON

NJRVer
Explorer
Explorer
Anybody know what tires U-Haul uses on their trailers?
Friends picked up a brand new 6x12 from U Haul. It was dark out and it didn't occur to me to look at the brand, but those were some hefty tires. Didn't look like your typical ST trailer tire judging by how deep the tread was on them.

Bamaman11
Explorer
Explorer
Obviously, RV and boat trailer manufacturers are simply willing to take the cheapest way out. On the other hand, many people with tire problems have them under inflated and are not always careful going over curbs and railroad tracks.

Have you tried to find high quality ST tires locally? I don't think that there are enough good ST tires in North America to service the industry. The manufacturers have to go to China because not enough North American tires have been built. Great tires for heavier trailers are Maxxis M8008's, Goodyear G614's, Bridgestone R250's and Michelin XPS Ribs. (Some are LT 10 ply truck tires.)

I'm switching over my new trailer tires to Bridgestone Duravis R250's, and there's a $70 rebate until 8/6/2014.

Turtle_n_Peeps
Explorer
Explorer
I have ST tires on my trailer and always have.

I have had Goodyears and China junk and anything in-between on my trailer. All most always at 70+ MPH. In Utah at 80 for hours at a time in hot weather this summer.

One blowout in my life. Almost certainly a low tire nail deal.

So no, I don't believe they are hurting tires.
~ Too many freaks & not enough circuses ~


"Life is not tried ~ it is merely survived ~ if you're standing
outside the fire"

"The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly."- Abraham Lincoln

K3WE
Explorer
Explorer
Tires blow for many reasons.

Last year I used my spare for about 50 miles, put it back on the spare rack and it blew up one day, just sitting there.

The culprit was mostly age, but it's hot, cold, you run over stuff, etc. etc.

I kind of believe that tires are cheaply made, but as to proof of why they fail when there's so many different things...

caberto
Explorer
Explorer
That's a good point Winged One... never thought about that.

On our last trip, 6 states, 3400 miles... I saw more than a few fivers and TT's pass me up (and I was doing between 63-65) like nothing, and thought well, they are probably some people who will later complain about cheap tires blowing up.

Regardless of the reason for 65mph, that is what they are rated for, and unlike other ratings, there is nothing that will increase that rating. I guess I'm just not in that much of a hurry while towing to feel like I need to do 70 or 80 down the highway, meanwhile risking over-heating the tires.

I find it interesting that the weight police are so adamant about the ratings manufacturers indicate for weights and say we should all stay well under those weights, but when it comes to tires, the China Bomb police totally discredit the speed and weight limits on tires and call foul.
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Cummins12V98
Explorer III
Explorer III
I have towed the stretch of I-10 between California and Phoenix at over 75 MPH (the posted speed limit) many times with the factory GY G's on our heavy Mobile Suites with no ill effects. Also have done the same with the GY H's I have now.

Kinda sucks coming back into Cal where is limit is 55 for trailers, feels like you are crawling!
2015 RAM LongHorn 3500 Dually CrewCab 4X4 CUMMINS/AISIN RearAir 385HP/865TQ 4:10's
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"HeavyWeight" B&W RVK3600

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2007.5 Mobile Suites 36 SB3 29,000# Combined SOLD

JEBar
Explorer
Explorer
the delivery drivers are paid by the mile (one way) and not by the hour .... the bottom line is they really don't clear much money per trip so they have to make as many trips as possible .... that doesn't excuse exceeding the speed limit but it does provide a motivation .... they are liable for damage done while in transit .... I don't know if they would be held liable for a damage from a tire failure while .... I have seen campers with axles not properly aligned that literally wore the tires out while on the way from the factor to the dealership

Jim
'07 Freightliner Sportchassis
'06 SunnyBrook 34BWKS

Me_Again
Explorer II
Explorer II
So the LEO's look the other direction in all the states that they pass through?

Wouldn't commercial haulers that consistently drove that fast would be racking up tickets and have insurance problems?

The whole 65MPH speed restriction to get the inflated capacity rating is the root of the problem. A trailer that weighs 14K to 15K on cheaply made tires that weigh 35 pounds. It just does not compute, we would not accept this with a new car or pickup, so why do we accept with a 60-80K new trailer?

I hear that some manufacturers are now installing the LRG Sailun S637's. I know that are Cardinal club has gotten Cardinal to offer GY G614's as a factor upgrade.

Chris
2021 F150 2.7 Ecoboost - Summer Home 2017 Bighorn 3575el. Can Am Spyder RT-L Chrome, Kawasaki KRX1000. Retired and enjoying it! RIP DW 07-05-2021

trailertraveler
Explorer
Explorer
I have also wondered about damage during delivery and also from sitting on the dealers lot or at home. Some of Goodyear's recommendations for tire storage including on a vehicle require some effort that I am not sure dealers or even some owners go through.
Safe travels!
Trailertraveler

dapperdan
Explorer
Explorer
Winged One wrote:
I was on the I-69 the other day, tooling along at my typical 71/72 mph. I had 2 trucks pass me pulling trailers that were obviously being delivered (DOT markings on the trucks, etc). They just eased by me, but must have been doing about 74/75 mph.

This was not the first time this has happened, but it got me wondering.

Are these 65mph tires being damaged during transport. People say their new trailer was properly aired, not overloaded, not speeding, yet they have a blowout. Were their tires damaged, a time bomb, from the day they picked it up from the dealer?


Good point Winged One. Those trailers being delivered are at their lightest, not that I'm trying to defend those transporters but they might have that in mind. More likely though they simply don't give a Sh**, just get it to the dealership, sign off on it and get back to get another one, keep the money flowing. Once the transporter delivers the goods it's not HIS problem any more.

Dan

rr2254545
Explorer
Explorer
Having traveled the interstates of the country extensively recently I would blame our run down roads for many tire problems. In many stretches who could even go the speeds you guys are talking about.
I for one slow down to avoid getting shaken to death.
2012 Winnebago Journey 36M Cummins 360
2014 Jeep Cherokee
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loulou57
Explorer
Explorer
We had this conversation with the dealer we bought from just a couple of weeks ago. He said he has had to replace tires as well as repair other damage due to delivery issues.

calamus
Explorer
Explorer
I drive 2 hours of interstate everyday and have also wondered how they get away with driving that fast its closer to 80-85 mph the drive around here I have not seen any of them on the side of the road with a flat tire?? I guess owners are just lucky! We get the flats and blow outs
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