waynefi
Feb 05, 2019Explorer
Old tires?
How can I tell if my tires are getting old? They have about 30000 mi on them. The tread still looks OK. The sidewalls look OK, but I don't really know what to look for. These are Karrier Loadstars.
drsteve wrote:Terryallan wrote:waynefi wrote:
There's another way of looking at this. If a tire fails in 3 years of normal use, it was defective anyway. Age had nothing to do with it. If it's still OK after 3, you got a good one. Keep it for 3 more.
I'll admit that 8 might be pushing it.
Not so. ALL of my TT tires blew in their 4th year. That is why I won't allow 4 year old tire on my TT any more. Not even on the spare rim.
You have had the worst luck of anyone with TT tires.
Terryallan wrote:waynefi wrote:
There's another way of looking at this. If a tire fails in 3 years of normal use, it was defective anyway. Age had nothing to do with it. If it's still OK after 3, you got a good one. Keep it for 3 more.
I'll admit that 8 might be pushing it.
Not so. ALL of my TT tires blew in their 4th year. That is why I won't allow 4 year old tire on my TT any more. Not even on the spare rim.
deltabravo wrote:
Here's my old tires
I changed them out to Goodyear Endurance
waynefi wrote:
There's another way of looking at this. If a tire fails in 3 years of normal use, it was defective anyway. Age had nothing to do with it. If it's still OK after 3, you got a good one. Keep it for 3 more.
I'll admit that 8 might be pushing it.
wiskeyVI wrote:
What about using a good Light Truck Tire, load range E?
waynefi wrote:
I must be really lucky, since I've gotten almost 8 years and 30000 miles out of a pair of cheap Chinese tires.
It helps that the trailer is light, and when I'm not camping it is parked in a shady spot.
I'm surprised that so much of this is about years, not miles. I don't replace car tires after 3 years, I look at miles and tread.