โJan-06-2019 09:55 AM
โFeb-01-2019 08:02 AM
No I'm not going to balance the trailer tires. I'm sorry I hadn't replied to you earlier. I have read the supposed pros and cons on this forum, but unless I observe some strange wear, I don't see the need to balance trailer tires. If something seems seriously out of whack back there, I may reconsider my decision.
โFeb-01-2019 03:58 AM
โJan-31-2019 08:19 PM
Grit dog wrote:
After all this care, discussion and consternation for your tires are you going to balance them?
โJan-29-2019 04:50 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:I'm not running my tires at 50 psi. That might be great, but not for me. Trailer tires take too much of a beating for me to go down the road like that, just simply is not happening.
Wise choice.
Every time I've did a 1-800 or a email to Goodyear about tire recommendations over the years for a specific job they gave me this from their RV tires website and brochures before the net;
Goodyear Tire and Rubber .... weighing RVs
Special Considerations
**Unless trying to resolve poor ride quality problems with an RV trailer, it is recommended that trailer tires be inflated to the pressure indicated on the sidewall of the tire. Trailer tires experience significant lateral (side-to-side) loads due to vehicle sway from uneven roads or passing vehicles. Using the inflation pressure engraved on the sidewall will provide optimum load carrying capacity and minimize heat build-up.**
โJan-28-2019 06:42 PM
I'm not running my tires at 50 psi. That might be great, but not for me. Trailer tires take too much of a beating for me to go down the road like that, just simply is not happening.
โJan-28-2019 03:19 PM
twodownzero wrote:
Yes, the empty weight of my trailer would allow me to run pressure that low. No thanks. Trailer would wander all over the place and the tires would get hot.
โJan-28-2019 11:04 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
If you say so, I guess GY Tech does not have a clue??? I am assuming your psi of 50 means the chart says that based on your load requiring 45psi???
โJan-28-2019 09:57 AM
โJan-28-2019 08:21 AM
โJan-28-2019 07:13 AM
twodownzero wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
twodowzero, you invested your $$$ well!
I HIGHLY advise running your air pressure based on actual weight plus 5psi.
https://www.goodyearrvtires.com/pdfs/rv_inflation.pdf
I'm not running my tires at 50 psi. That might be great, but not for me. Trailer tires take too much of a beating for me to go down the road like that, just simply is not happening.
โJan-27-2019 09:57 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
twodowzero, you invested your $$$ well!
I HIGHLY advise running your air pressure based on actual weight plus 5psi.
โJan-27-2019 01:57 PM
โJan-27-2019 10:05 AM
โJan-27-2019 09:53 AM
CapriRacer wrote:twodownzero wrote:
So I checked my wheels and I can't find a psi rating anywhere on them. Also checked my spare wheel for my other trailer and found nothing on it either, just a weight rating. If I had tires rated higher than the factory pressure, I'm not sure what I'd do.
It is my understanding that the max pressure is NOT required by the regulations - and after asking the question of various people who might know (wheel engineers and the like!), the best information is that load, not inflation pressure, is what is critical - that inflation pressure hardly matters when it comes to wheel failures.