โSep-29-2014 09:13 PM
โOct-18-2014 03:53 PM
PartyMarty wrote:
First of all it is DEXSTAR
Second , the tire is the weakest link .
It is irresponsible for you to deny somebody the advantage of installing a better tire .
Nobody is suggesting overloading the wheel , which is limited by weight capacity .
Only an ***** would not think that the tire is the weakest link .
The steel RV wheels are not stamped with a psi limit as a general rule including DEXSTARS .
The safety advantage of installing a much better tire over the factory ST tire greatly outweighs any cautionary advice of not to install that better tire .
DEXSTAR has responded to me previously that there is no reason not to install a Load Range E tire and inflate it to the 80 psi required as long as the wheel LOAD rating is not exceeded .
โOct-05-2014 08:18 AM
โOct-04-2014 09:14 PM
โOct-04-2014 08:18 PM
Lowsuv wrote:
Regarding Michelin Tires :
I just bought a new set of Michelin LT2 highway tires from Costco on the rebate / exec member promotion offering a $ 60 rebate plus $ 70 rebate .
I paid net $ 729 installed for size LT 265 /75 R16 Load range E after rebates .
They replaced a similar size LT 265/75R16 LRE Michelin that I had run for 60,000 miles on my duramax pickup .
The previous tires were not to the wear bars but I could not pass up the super-dooper sale price of $ 729 after rebates in early Sept 2014 ..
My original factory tires were the LT 245 /75R16 LRE .
The diameter of these LT 265 /75r16 LRE is 31.7 " .
They may have fit where the ST 235 /80 r16 trailer tires go because the diameters are the same at 31.7 " .
The LT 265 /75r16 LRE is placarded at 3415 # on the LT scale .
A logical upgrade for replacement of the ST 235/80 would be to measure to see if an LT 265 /75r16 LRE will fit , especially for the heavy toy haulers and 5th wheels .
โOct-04-2014 06:49 PM
โOct-04-2014 06:05 AM
DEXSTAR has responded to me previously that there is no reason not to install a Load Range E tire and inflate it to the 80 psi required as long as the wheel LOAD rating is not exceeded .
โOct-03-2014 08:28 PM
PartyMarty wrote:
First of all it is DEXSTAR
Second , the tire is the weakest link .
It is irresponsible for you to deny somebody the advantage of installing a better tire .
Nobody is suggesting overloading the wheel , which is limited by weight capacity .
Only an ***** would not think that the tire is the weakest link .
The steel RV wheels are not stamped with a psi limit as a general rule including DEXSTARS .
The safety advantage of installing a much better tire over the factory ST tire greatly outweighs any cautionary advice of not to install that better tire .
DEXSTAR has responded to me previously that there is no reason not to install a Load Range E tire and inflate it to the 80 psi required as long as the wheel LOAD rating is not exceeded .
โOct-03-2014 03:32 PM
โOct-03-2014 03:24 PM
โOct-03-2014 02:56 PM
โOct-03-2014 01:25 PM
โOct-03-2014 04:47 AM
Lowsuv wrote:LarryJM wrote:Lowsuv wrote:
The bottom line is :
We are seeing zero posts of failures of LT tires on this forum .
We have seen two dozen plus posts over the last couple of years about Maxxis tires ( made by the Chang-Shin Rubber Company of Taiwan ) of failures .
At replacement time , a switch to the best LT alternatives such as
the Kumho 857 radial size 205R14 or
the Goodyear Cargo G26 size 225/70R15 will eliminate tire failures on trailers .
Both are Load Range D and fit onto the factory steel wheels without modification .
The equilivant LR "D" Kumho 857 in that size is a 65psi tire so the normal existing 50psi rims normally found on 14" ST OEM tires won't meet the requirements of that tire.
Larry
There are no RV steel wheels limited to 50 psi .
There are RV steel wheels that are stamped with a weight rating .
Some aluminum wheels are stamped with a psi limit .
Aluminum wheels , when they fail they do not do so catastrophically .
Aluminum wheels can develop a small hairline crack at the shoulder and these aluminum wheels simply will no longer hold air pressure .
Those failures occur do to usage and weight loading and are not caused by too much psi .
The myth that certain steel RV wheels are psi limited has been perpetuated on this forum by folks who simply don't know .
The strength of a steel wheel designed to support an 1820 # load rating is more than adequate to hold 80 psi and is not a design consideration in practical applications .
โOct-03-2014 01:15 AM
โOct-03-2014 12:57 AM
Francesca Knowles wrote:Lowsuv wrote:
I did a search looking for LT failure
I found no such post
Try different search terms. That is, if you really want to "know".
Here's one: Posted July 2013Posted: 07/05/13 07:16pm Link | Quote | Print | Notify Moderator
Well, I never expected to be writing this but I had a blowout on my second set of Michelin 16โ LT load range E tires. They were only a year old.
We were on our way back to Houston Tx a week ago from a long summer vacation loop through the southwest desert. (About a 3000 mile pull.) On the last day just a couple of hundred miles north of home on US 84 we lost a tire to what the tire store manager called a catastrophic blowout. (There were just some inner casing pieces between the beads.) This was during the heat wave, I think the outside air temperature was about 103 degF. I pull at 60 mph, checked my tire pressure in the morning as I started and thought I was good. All that came to an end when a car pulled up next to me and held up a sign saying โblowoutโ. Bummer.
I could not even tell I was down a tire. There was no indication based on handling. Last time I scaled I was about 8600 lbs total on the two 5200 lb trailer axles.
Now I donโt feel so invincible tire wise. It cold have been due to a bad tire, a leaky valve stem, road hazard, who knows?
Maybe it is time for RIBs on the trailer and a tire pressure monitoring system.
Good thing I carry a tire changing ramp and DOT triangles.
Oh well, time to go fix the damage to the trailerโฆ