โAug-25-2022 05:25 PM
โAug-27-2022 08:47 PM
My travel trailer has Dexter tandem axles. I noticed both tires on the front axle have slight cupping on the outside of the tires.
โAug-27-2022 09:37 AM
โAug-27-2022 08:48 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
John,
That chart CAME DIRECTLY FROM DEXTERS OWN MANUAL ON TRAILER AXLES.
Dexter builds trailer axles.
Snip..
Don't "shoot the messenger".
Snip..
The manual also has a maintenance schedule chart that gives normal maintenance intervals for the bearings and other items which I suspect you and 99.9% of all trailer owners ignore..
It could also just be lousy tire build, and yes, this happens even to the supposed "best brands".. I had a set of trailer tires cup, replaced the tires, no more cupping..
But what really gets me is when folks start blaming it on "bent axles" or "axles out of alignment" as the very first thing to look at when the very first response is to check the simple things like tires being out of round or way out of balance and even checking the bearings preload settings. All things that do not cost a dime rather than making this an extreme sport of spending money.
โAug-27-2022 07:07 AM
JBarca wrote:
The chart shown above is a text book standard chart for tire wear. I do not disagree with any of it. However in this case, we are talking about a travel trailer made in the RV industry, not a car, truck etc. where that chart actually fits better. A tandem axle trailer made in the RV industry with no steering on the lowest budget that just gets by, is very different then an automobile with very good and stable suspension.
I do agree 110% with the statement about once a tire starts wearing bad, it will continue to wear that bad even after the problem is corrected. My step dad was in the garage business for over 40 years working on autos, and I can still hear him telling me that fact, that the tire wear will continue even if the issue was corrected.
Before we start telling Campermama that their wheel bearings are shot or set wrong causing the tire wear they are seeing, it might be better to first confirm that actual cupping as shown in that chart is root cause of the wear on the tires. There was going to be pictures posted so we can see what they are seeing. That can then help a lot better then speculating that cupping is actually happening. Maybe Campermama misdiagnosed the wear and called it cupping, now folks are telling them to fix cupping, fix the tire balance and wheel bearings.
I have measured axle alignment on several campers, corrected bent axle tubes, repaired incorrect hanger locations, and worn suspension to name a few of the issues creating tire wear on a travel trailer. While I have not done thousands of campers on alignment checks, out of all of the ones I did do, none of those tire wear issues were due to actual cupping of a tire due to a wheel bearing going bad or the tire being out of balance. I'm not saying those conditions cannot exist, but I would say it is highly unlikely given what we know so far.
The statement of, an out of balance tire issue causing tire cupping wear on a TT, let's think about that for a moment. Think about how many thousands of travel trailers and 5th wheels leave the factory every day with unbalanced brake drums and tires. Do they all have tire cupping?
If the wheel bearings where set wrong, having excess play, and there is 10K miles on the camper, odds are high, those bearings for 10K miles would be severally damaged to the point of total failure or close to it. Has anyone ever seen a documented trailer wheel bearing survive a bad setup that long?
And then what are the odds that bad bearings and out of balance wheels so bad to cause cupping, just happened to end up on the same axle tube, yet the axle tube next to it, does not have the issue?
With what little we know about this camper wheel alignment, actual tire cupping does not stand out as the root cause of the tire wear. If we can get some pics of all 4 tires, that may help a lot better then assuming cupping is the root cause.
Hope this helps
John
โAug-26-2022 09:29 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Annd HERE is what Dexter says..
Page 77..
Click For Full-Size Image.
Snip...
Cupping can come from an out of balance issue or wheel bearing adjustment issue according to Dexter axles manual.
My tire shop tells me once they start wearing odd, nothing can slow it down or fix it other than replacing..
โAug-26-2022 04:55 PM
โAug-26-2022 04:22 PM
โAug-26-2022 10:16 AM
โAug-26-2022 09:46 AM
campermama wrote:JBarca wrote:campermama wrote:
My travel trailer has Dexter tandem axles. I noticed both tires on the front axle have slight cupping on the outside of the tires.
My fresh water tank is just behind that front axle and over the rear axle.
My question is could having more weight on the rear axle and less on the front axle be causing this?
I don't travel with a full tank but I do have 1/3 - 2/3 filled sometimes since I only boondock.
Everything on or around the axle looks fine otherwise.
The added weight of fresh water normally does not create outside tire wear, but axle or wheel alignment can. A pure weight overload more often points to inside tire wear due to loss of correct wheel camber assuming nothing else is messed up.
It would help to know a few things to better understand your tire wear. Here are a few items.
1. How old is the camper?
2. How many approx. miles are on the tires with the wear you now have since the tires were new? (if you know, or how many miles have you put on if you bought the camper used?)
3. Does the camper have leaf spring axles or a torsion axles?
4. Can you post some pics of the thread wear across the face of the tire in clear focus and lighting on all 4 tires? And which pic goes with which wheel location for front or rear tire and left or right tire. And yes, the rear tires help add to the story even if the wear is not as gross amount like the front.
Tire wear (assuming the the tires have not being rotated since new) help tell a story on wheel alignment.
Trailer running gear alignment issues comes from many places. Starting with the hangers welded on wrong on day 1 from the factory, axles being made wrong, worn suspension parts, loose wheel bearings, overloading of the axles, and wheel alignment damage from hitting curbs, pot holes or any other kind of bump at speed to name a few of the common issues.
Sadly, tire wear on campers is common when the wheel alignment is out of tolerance. And it happens somewhat frequently. When the wheels are in proper alignment and the axles not in overload, you will get even wear on the tire face for the life of the tire, other then minor normal outside tire turning wear which is not cupping. When they are out of alignment, the tires scrub the road wearing wrong rather then roll straight ahead.
Hope this helps,
John
PS. There are ways to correct the problems, but it helps first to know what the issue may be to tell you what to correct short of a quick answer, just take it to a RV dealer and let them deal with it. Not all RV dealers can handle trailer axle alignment, the shop needs to know and have the equipment for measuring all aspects of wheel alignment and later correcting the root cause of what is wrong.
I am not talking about it being overweight. I'm saying ALL the weight of the fresh water tank is on the REAR axle. So I am wondering if the FRONT axle with the cupping tire wear, doesn't have enough weight on it??
The trailer is a 2020, I bought it new. Tires are goodyear endurance, probably have about 10k miles on them. Trailer has leaf springs.Just noticed the cupping after the last 2k trip in which I carried more fresh water than usual. The "issue" is only on the front axle tires. Rear axle tires are fine! I'll try to get pictures today.
โAug-26-2022 08:04 AM
campermama wrote:
I am not talking about it being overweight. I'm saying ALL the weight of the fresh water tank is on the REAR axle. So I am wondering if the FRONT axle with the cupping tire wear, doesn't have enough weight on it??
The trailer is a 2020, I bought it new. Tires are goodyear endurance, probably have about 10k miles on them. Trailer has leaf springs.Just noticed the cupping after the last 2k trip in which I carried more fresh water than usual. The "issue" is only on the front axle tires. Rear axle tires are fine! I'll try to get pictures today.
โAug-26-2022 07:20 AM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โAug-26-2022 07:11 AM
JBarca wrote:campermama wrote:
My travel trailer has Dexter tandem axles. I noticed both tires on the front axle have slight cupping on the outside of the tires.
My fresh water tank is just behind that front axle and over the rear axle.
My question is could having more weight on the rear axle and less on the front axle be causing this?
I don't travel with a full tank but I do have 1/3 - 2/3 filled sometimes since I only boondock.
Everything on or around the axle looks fine otherwise.
The added weight of fresh water normally does not create outside tire wear, but axle or wheel alignment can. A pure weight overload more often points to inside tire wear due to loss of correct wheel camber assuming nothing else is messed up.
It would help to know a few things to better understand your tire wear. Here are a few items.
1. How old is the camper?
2. How many approx. miles are on the tires with the wear you now have since the tires were new? (if you know, or how many miles have you put on if you bought the camper used?)
3. Does the camper have leaf spring axles or a torsion axles?
4. Can you post some pics of the thread wear across the face of the tire in clear focus and lighting on all 4 tires? And which pic goes with which wheel location for front or rear tire and left or right tire. And yes, the rear tires help add to the story even if the wear is not as gross amount like the front.
Tire wear (assuming the the tires have not being rotated since new) help tell a story on wheel alignment.
Trailer running gear alignment issues comes from many places. Starting with the hangers welded on wrong on day 1 from the factory, axles being made wrong, worn suspension parts, loose wheel bearings, overloading of the axles, and wheel alignment damage from hitting curbs, pot holes or any other kind of bump at speed to name a few of the common issues.
Sadly, tire wear on campers is common when the wheel alignment is out of tolerance. And it happens somewhat frequently. When the wheels are in proper alignment and the axles not in overload, you will get even wear on the tire face for the life of the tire, other then minor normal outside tire turning wear which is not cupping. When they are out of alignment, the tires scrub the road wearing wrong rather then roll straight ahead.
Hope this helps,
John
PS. There are ways to correct the problems, but it helps first to know what the issue may be to tell you what to correct short of a quick answer, just take it to a RV dealer and let them deal with it. Not all RV dealers can handle trailer axle alignment, the shop needs to know and have the equipment for measuring all aspects of wheel alignment and later correcting the root cause of what is wrong.
โAug-25-2022 09:24 PM
campermama wrote:
My travel trailer has Dexter tandem axles. I noticed both tires on the front axle have slight cupping on the outside of the tires.
My fresh water tank is just behind that front axle and over the rear axle.
My question is could having more weight on the rear axle and less on the front axle be causing this?
I don't travel with a full tank but I do have 1/3 - 2/3 filled sometimes since I only boondock.
Everything on or around the axle looks fine otherwise.
โAug-25-2022 07:24 PM
campermama wrote:
My travel trailer has Dexter tandem axles. I noticed both tires on the front axle have slight cupping on the outside of the tires.
My fresh water tank is just behind that front axle and over the rear axle.
My question is could having more weight on the rear axle and less on the front axle be causing this?