โMay-27-2016 10:36 PM
โAug-05-2016 10:18 AM
โAug-05-2016 09:27 AM
โAug-05-2016 09:12 AM
โAug-05-2016 09:06 AM
โAug-05-2016 09:00 AM
โAug-05-2016 07:59 AM
mrekim wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:
Let me pose a question to all of those here who believe any of the following:
A. ST tires are inferior to LT's for trailer service
B: ST Tires made in China are intrinsically bad
C: LT Tires are made "Heavier" ie better than ST Tires and thus are better for trailer service.
If I was able to bring ONE expert from the industry to this discussion who would you believe?
A Tire Design Engineer? A company spokesperson? An independent Tire industry writer?
Or?
Just name it and I will do my best to contact them and bring them in some way to this discussion. I have many contacts in business and industry and am sure I can get their attention.
So name a source you WILL BELIEVE. Because some of you certainly continue to deny the facts as stated in several posted sources from differing parts of the industry. So this is your chance.
I would like to see stats that show plants (in any country), failure modes and number of failures. Brand names are probably meaningless. It's way easier to change the name on the side vs the plant that made the tire.
I will never buy from plant code 10 (NANKANG RUBBER INDUSTRIAL, CO. LTD.) because the Mission tires I had experienced three failures with two being belt separations and one being a bubble. This is running the tires at less than 1/2 of capacity. That in combination with other complaints about Mission tires makes me believe this is a reasonable decision.
I have had 1 belt separation from plant 1K (DOUBLESTAR DONGFENG TYRE CO., LTD) so for me the jury is still out on that plant.
I've had good service from plant 20 (MAXXIS INTERNATIONAL (THAILAND) CO., LTD).
โAug-05-2016 06:58 AM
4X4Dodger wrote:
Let me pose a question to all of those here who believe any of the following:
A. ST tires are inferior to LT's for trailer service
B: ST Tires made in China are intrinsically bad
C: LT Tires are made "Heavier" ie better than ST Tires and thus are better for trailer service.
If I was able to bring ONE expert from the industry to this discussion who would you believe?
A Tire Design Engineer? A company spokesperson? An independent Tire industry writer?
Or?
Just name it and I will do my best to contact them and bring them in some way to this discussion. I have many contacts in business and industry and am sure I can get their attention.
So name a source you WILL BELIEVE. Because some of you certainly continue to deny the facts as stated in several posted sources from differing parts of the industry. So this is your chance.
โAug-03-2016 07:56 AM
โAug-03-2016 07:19 AM
rbpru wrote:
I am not an LT fan but I would choose them over STs if I cruised at 70 mph. No sense asking a tire to do what it was not designed to do.
โAug-02-2016 07:21 PM
โAug-02-2016 05:04 PM
โAug-02-2016 11:01 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:
Maybe some folks do.
I choose LT tires for my small trailer fleet because ST tires were killing my small hauling business. With 28 tires under my trailers on the road every day I had to do sumpin'.
A fine old gone but not forgotten Goodyear truck tire dealer showed me a cheaper/long term way.
ST tire were cooked after 12k-18k miles depending on size. LT tires ran 40k-60k miles depending on size. I was one happy small business owner.
I've simply applied that experience to my rv trailers.
Example...... my current 11200 lb 5er has 48k+ miles on the 2nd set of BFG LT E tires. Ran the 1st set for 55k+ miles and seven years. Zero issues and I drive the speed limit.
I can't afford to use ST tires at the rate they would need to be replaced. Other have different experiences.
โAug-02-2016 07:13 AM
โAug-01-2016 06:15 PM
โAug-01-2016 01:37 PM
aguablanco wrote:2oldman wrote:
I wonder if some choose (and vigorously defend that choice) LT tires is that they like to tow faster than 65mph.
And are willing to spend dearly to do it.
I have 82 MPH rated St tires and I rarely go over 65 MPH. I consider the extra 17 MPH as a safety factor. Who, in their right mind, would run any equipment at the absolute high end of performance. If I had two 2500# axles on my trailer, that was 5000# wet I would consider it overloaded and probably install 3500# axles. It isn't always a speed factor, it can also be a safety margin.
RichH