Jul-06-2016 05:21 PM
Aug-24-2016 04:13 PM
Aug-19-2016 01:31 PM
Aug-17-2016 05:23 AM
Aug-16-2016 08:06 PM
The praises some folks sing about LT tires are unwarranted, in my opinion because those tires will not carry the same load in 15" wheels that ST tires will carry. ST tires should be replaced every 5 yrs regardless of miles. LT and P tires should be replaced at 6 years according to Discount (not the 10 yrs quoted elsewhere.)
I don't believe the average tire owner knows more about tires than a reputable tire dealer such as Discount. Anecdotal information is not helpful when compared to the much larger experience-base of a large distributor such as they. IMO.
Aug-15-2016 11:01 PM
Aug-09-2016 03:31 PM
DSteiner51 wrote:
My 5th wheel had Goodyear ST tires put on at the factory. Build date was August 1998 and I replaced those tires in June of 2010 to make a trip out west with three other rigs. I thot it a shame to trash good tires but my wife and another RV.net person very strongly felt it should be done. Never had a flat except the spare tire got to the point it wouldn't hold air so I left it at home. Sold the trailer in Jan of 2016 and the replacement Goodyear ST tires looked nearly new. I had TPMS in the tires and kept the cold pressures within 5lbs at all times. The new 5th has the Chinese tires on from the factory, build date is Feb 2015, bought new Feb 2016 and I've put 2000 miles on it. I installed TPMS and intend to operate it with cold pressures within 5 psi also so time will tell.... Ask me in ten more years...
I would expect new tech Carlisle tires to do at least as well.
Aug-09-2016 01:24 PM
DSteiner51 wrote:
...My 5th wheel had Goodyear ST tires put on at the factory. Build date was August 1998 and I replaced those tires in June of 2010 to make a trip out west with three other rigs...
Aug-08-2016 05:40 PM
CKNSLS wrote:DSteiner51 wrote:CKNSLS wrote:msjdbman wrote:
Well, I sure hope that everyone has good luck with these new tires from Carlisle, but I'll never spend another dime on them. I spent extra money on a set of ST235/85/R16 Load range F tires just five years ago, hoping that the increased capacity would be beneficial. Tread still looks brand new, sidewalls like new, no weather checking at all, but internal belts let go on 3 of the 4 allowing the outer circumference to swell by over 2 additional inches. They have now all been replaced with LT tires. These were on my gooseneck, not my fiver, but I never overloaded them at all. So good luck to you all!
Those tires were on your trailer too long. Period. The weather doesn't matter. You get UV rays even when it's cloudy.
Sorry, very poor excuse. My tires on my fifth wheel were on for 12 years and approx 50k miles and only replaced before a 4K trip out west because my wife thot they should be changed because of excuses like this. Never covered and not weather checked and stored outside. I'll admit, after I purchased the trailer there were only three or four months in ten years that it didn't move somewhere to camp.
Your the only one who can make a claim like this towing a travel trailer. 12 years....unheard of.
I refuse to accept that a tires internal construction integrity is out the window at 5 years, especially on a trailer stored inside off from the concrete on wooden planks. If the tires become heavily weather checked, or tread compounds giving away due to heat and dry conditions, then that's what it is. As I mentioned earlier, tires of many different manufacturers hold up for years upon years here in Michigan. If folks experience differing outcomes in different parts of the country, then that's what it is.
Aug-08-2016 05:38 PM
msjdbman wrote:CKNSLS wrote:msjdbman wrote:
Well, I sure hope that everyone has good luck with these new tires from Carlisle, but I'll never spend another dime on them. I spent extra money on a set of ST235/85/R16 Load range F tires just five years ago, hoping that the increased capacity would be beneficial. Tread still looks brand new, sidewalls like new, no weather checking at all, but internal belts let go on 3 of the 4 allowing the outer circumference to swell by over 2 additional inches. They have now all been replaced with LT tires. These were on my gooseneck, not my fiver, but I never overloaded them at all. So good luck to you all!
Those tires were on your trailer too long. Period. The weather doesn't matter. You get UV rays even when it's cloudy.
I refuse to accept that a tires internal construction integrity is out the window at 5 years, especially on a trailer stored inside off from the concrete on wooden planks. If the tires become heavily weather checked, or tread compounds giving away due to heat and dry conditions, then that's what it is. As I mentioned earlier, tires of many different manufacturers hold up for years upon years here in Michigan. If folks experience differing outcomes in different parts of the country, then that's what it is.
Aug-08-2016 03:01 PM
Aug-08-2016 01:46 PM
CKNSLS wrote:msjdbman wrote:
Well, I sure hope that everyone has good luck with these new tires from Carlisle, but I'll never spend another dime on them. I spent extra money on a set of ST235/85/R16 Load range F tires just five years ago, hoping that the increased capacity would be beneficial. Tread still looks brand new, sidewalls like new, no weather checking at all, but internal belts let go on 3 of the 4 allowing the outer circumference to swell by over 2 additional inches. They have now all been replaced with LT tires. These were on my gooseneck, not my fiver, but I never overloaded them at all. So good luck to you all!
Those tires were on your trailer too long. Period. The weather doesn't matter. You get UV rays even when it's cloudy.
Aug-08-2016 08:36 AM
Aug-08-2016 08:21 AM
Aug-08-2016 08:12 AM