Jan-17-2014 12:19 PM
Feb-16-2014 03:15 AM
AKSuperDually wrote:jerem0621 wrote:
I rotated my Dually tires. Was there a reason not too?
I did inside tires to front, outside tires to inside on the opposing side and the fronts to the opposit outside back.
Thanks
What you want to avoid is changing the direction of the tire. Once tires take a lay, the belts in the sidewall shift slightly. If you change that to a reverse direction, you allow for sidewall bubbles and potential failure.
If you can rotate your wheels so that the tires don't change direction of rotation...then you're set. I couldn't do that without dismounting and remounting them on wheels. With aluminum wheels, you're stuck.
Feb-15-2014 02:38 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
If you have aluminum wheels like I do it is a waste of time and money to rotate dually tires. If I had all steel wheels I MIGHT rotate.
Jan-20-2014 04:23 AM
AKSuperDually wrote:
What you want to avoid is changing the direction of the tire. Once tires take a lay, the belts in the sidewall shift slightly. If you change that to a reverse direction, you allow for sidewall bubbles and potential failure......
Jan-20-2014 02:17 AM
jerem0621 wrote:
I rotated my Dually tires. Was there a reason not too?
I did inside tires to front, outside tires to inside on the opposing side and the fronts to the opposit outside back.
Thanks
Jan-18-2014 05:01 PM
Jan-18-2014 04:27 PM
Jan-18-2014 04:08 PM
M GO BLUE wrote:
Always best to replace all 6 tires at once...
Jan-18-2014 07:24 AM
donn0128 wrote:
Hankook has a good reputation at a reasonable price. Michelin or BF Goodrich Commercial TA are a couple of more options.
Jan-18-2014 05:06 AM
Jan-18-2014 04:21 AM
The Mad Norsky wrote:
I've got the same vehicle you have now, but got mine new.
Also has the OEM General Grabber HTS tires on it. My fronts are wearing faster than the rears, but only 22,000 some odd miles on the vehicle.
I find these front tires to cup badly. Tried rotation (side to side in front) and re-balancing, which has helped a little.
Rear tires are wearing really nicely.
It may be the Alcoa wheels,(factory OEM's on my King Ranch version) but the fronts on mine are real good at loosing air pressure. Try to keep them around 65, but if left on their own for any amount of time, its back down to the 52 PSI range. No leaks found, valve stems seems good, so wheels are left right now as the culprit.
Because of cupping fronts, I have also been looking for tires.
Right now I am leaning towards the Nitto Crossteks in the 245/75/17 sizes.
Jan-18-2014 03:19 AM
Jan-18-2014 01:01 AM
Jan-17-2014 05:07 PM
Jan-17-2014 04:42 PM