โApr-14-2015 12:49 PM
โApr-16-2015 12:35 AM
profdant139 wrote:
I had a blowout on my old trailer -- it tore up the wheel well. So when I got my new trailer, I used gorilla glue to fasten thick slabs of truck mud flaps, cut to shape, inside the wheel well, as a sort of armor. I don't know if it will stand up to a blowout -- I hope I never find out -- but if you are interested in armoring your wheel wells, here is how I did it:
Armor
โApr-15-2015 04:40 PM
โApr-14-2015 06:09 PM
โApr-14-2015 05:43 PM
darsben wrote:yes to all your questions. They are kept up to pressure and I also do a visual inspection although I don't have X-ray vision. I'm pretty anal when it comes to stuff like that. I was traveling at 60 mph and slowing. And yes a chunk of wood blew out my tire. I found it inside the tire this evening. Thanks for correcting the spell checker. The camper is also covered when not in use. In case there are doubts about that.
Mileage irrelevant to the discussion.
Do you keep your tires covered when not in use?
Do you check tire pressure frequently or just look em over and figure they are good to go.
Tire maintenance is important.
Slowing down to avoid debris might have been a good idea but I doubt that "spewing all sorts of bark and wood derbies" (sic) would make a good tire go bad.
BY the way how fast where you going
โApr-14-2015 04:34 PM
โApr-14-2015 04:19 PM
โApr-14-2015 04:09 PM
โApr-14-2015 03:32 PM
2012Coleman wrote:
Well, it happened to me this past weekend too. While traveling home from a week long outing at Wekiva Springs State Park in Fl, a truck hauling pine tree trunks pulled on to the interstate just ahead of me spewing all sorts of bark and wood derbies - 30 minutes from home. I tried to avoid by slowing down, but just when I thought I was OK - BAM! My right rear tire decomposed into the mess you see below.
Luckily, this happened at the entrance to a rest stop and I was able to limp in and park. Unfortunately, I didn't have the means to jack the TT up and change the tire myself - the penalty for this being having to call Good Sam Roadside assistance and wait three hours. This has already been remedied with the purchase of a new jack to replace the old one with a leaky seal.
Luckily, the guy who was dispatched was great and had my tire changed in less than 15 minutes. He mentioned tires with a higher load range would not be a bad idea, although I'm not exceeding my gross weights.
Not a whole lot of damage occurred except for the black fabric directly behind the tire being ripped to shreds and the support for the wheel well skirt twisted, but repairable.
How do you go about fixing the fabric? Is there a source for it? Can you use any kind of tape successfully to seal a patch?
My tires are well maintained and I was running at the correct pressure, but are OEM with a date code that makes them born in 2010, so I'm thinking of replacing the entire set. We are both working folks, so I've put under 10k miles on them.
Have been through all the threads regarding this, and not wanting to start a new tire from china thread - just thought I would inform others to stay away from these types of trucks as hitting the stuff falling off it is clearly what caused my blowout. And hopefully get some good tips on how to fix the fabric underneath.
โApr-14-2015 03:06 PM
โApr-14-2015 02:24 PM
โApr-14-2015 01:50 PM
โApr-14-2015 01:38 PM
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โApr-14-2015 12:58 PM