โMay-27-2016 10:36 PM
โJun-20-2016 11:33 AM
rbpru wrote:
Hmmm, let's see, one million STs a year place in service on TTs; for at least the last three years. Perhaps a few thousand LTs in TT service for the same time period.
Gee, I wonder which will have more failure reports on the RV net?
Oh heck, it is just data and nobody pays attention to numbers anyway.
โJun-20-2016 09:44 AM
โJun-20-2016 09:37 AM
โJun-20-2016 08:24 AM
โJun-20-2016 08:17 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:pira wrote:
Tires in both classes have failed prematurely for several reasons, an unknown percentage of them fail for unknown reasons.
I'm curious where your information that both classes have failed prematurely comes from.
Your saying LT and ST fail at the same rates....... which they do not.
Checking around the net in all the different rv/non rvtrailering forums"" we see very few LT tire failures when used in a trailer position..... at least anywhere near the ST tire failure rate even when we consider percentage of tires used in a trailer position.
โJun-20-2016 05:57 AM
pira114 wrote:
The problem with this whole discussion is that we all are coming from a perspective of being correct. When, in fact, none of us can claim that all of our statements are indeed fact.
.....snip....
โJun-20-2016 05:43 AM
pira wrote:
Tires in both classes have failed prematurely for several reasons, an unknown percentage of them fail for unknown reasons.
โJun-19-2016 08:48 PM
Huntindog wrote:
...
Were his lips moving when he said that? Typical salesman. He has a profit motive for everything he tells you.
โJun-19-2016 08:00 PM
โJun-19-2016 06:56 PM
โJun-19-2016 06:06 PM
Huntindog wrote:dave54 wrote:rbpru wrote:
Let's see, on the one hand people buy STs because they are cheaper than LTs and they cannot see the value of spending more money for the LTs.
On the other hand, the tire folks make more profit selling the cheaper, far lower volume, STs over the LTs. They are perfectly willing to be sued by our litigious society.
Not exactly how capitalism usually works.
Not to mention the fact that not all tire makers make STs.
As I stated before, P tires do what they are designed to do, STs do what they are designed to do and LTs do what they are designed to do.
If you think you are going to exceed the ratings of the tire, do not blame the tire maker if it fails. It is easy enough to go with the tire YOU think will work. I am sure the TT dealer will retrofit almost any tire combo you wish to pay for.
There is no doubt that some folk feel "safer" with LTs. Likewise, millions of TT owners never give their STs a second thought.
My local tire dealer confesses his profit margin on LTs are higher than on STs. He will sell you what you want, but he advises customers to use ST on trailers, and he uses ST on his FW.
Were his lips moving when he said that? Typical salesman. He has a profit motive for everything he tells you.
โJun-19-2016 04:44 PM
โJun-19-2016 04:39 PM
dave54 wrote:rbpru wrote:
Let's see, on the one hand people buy STs because they are cheaper than LTs and they cannot see the value of spending more money for the LTs.
On the other hand, the tire folks make more profit selling the cheaper, far lower volume, STs over the LTs. They are perfectly willing to be sued by our litigious society.
Not exactly how capitalism usually works.
Not to mention the fact that not all tire makers make STs.
As I stated before, P tires do what they are designed to do, STs do what they are designed to do and LTs do what they are designed to do.
If you think you are going to exceed the ratings of the tire, do not blame the tire maker if it fails. It is easy enough to go with the tire YOU think will work. I am sure the TT dealer will retrofit almost any tire combo you wish to pay for.
There is no doubt that some folk feel "safer" with LTs. Likewise, millions of TT owners never give their STs a second thought.
My local tire dealer confesses his profit margin on LTs are higher than on STs. He will sell you what you want, but he advises customers to use ST on trailers, and he uses ST on his FW.
โJun-19-2016 04:34 PM
rbpru wrote:
Let's see, on the one hand people buy STs because they are cheaper than LTs and they cannot see the value of spending more money for the LTs.
On the other hand, the tire folks make more profit selling the cheaper, far lower volume, STs over the LTs. They are perfectly willing to be sued by our litigious society.The govt. testing standard such as they are is the defense that works well. And any tire that fails, they can claim that it was the owners fault, for not using the tire within it's stated limitations... Anyone that has had an ST tire up to 66 MPH is exceeding the stated limit. (most STs) Most attornys won't take such a case on contingency.
Not exactly how capitalism usually works.
Not to mention the fact that not all tire makers make STs.
True. it appears that some have higher standards than others.
As I stated before, P tires do what they are designed to do, STs do what they are designed to do and LTs do what they are designed to do.
If you think you are going to exceed the ratings of the tire, do not blame the tire maker if it fails. It is easy enough to go with the tire YOU think will work. I am sure the TT dealer will retrofit almost any tire combo you wish to pay for.
There is no doubt that some folk feel "safer" with LTs. Likewise, millions of TT owners never give their STs a second thought.
Perhaps some of them should... I mean, this conversation has you thinking about it.. If and when you decide that ST tires are not cutting it for you.... Now you know that there are alternatives.
โJun-19-2016 04:31 PM
rbpru wrote:
Let's see, on the one hand people buy STs because they are cheaper than LTs and they cannot see the value of spending more money for the LTs.
On the other hand, the tire folks make more profit selling the cheaper, far lower volume, STs over the LTs. They are perfectly willing to be sued by our litigious society.
Not exactly how capitalism usually works.
Not to mention the fact that not all tire makers make STs.
As I stated before, P tires do what they are designed to do, STs do what they are designed to do and LTs do what they are designed to do.
If you think you are going to exceed the ratings of the tire, do not blame the tire maker if it fails. It is easy enough to go with the tire YOU think will work. I am sure the TT dealer will retrofit almost any tire combo you wish to pay for.
There is no doubt that some folk feel "safer" with LTs. Likewise, millions of TT owners never give their STs a second thought.