So my 2007 RZ2 on an Extreme trailer has had four seasons on the original tires. My previous experience is that trailer tires never last more than four seasons, but these looked in perfect shape. I had my trailer in to repack the bearings with traditional grease (because I don't trust the oil bath system, which sure enough already had cracking seals) and even my trailer guy thought they had another season left in them.
Wrong! I felt the shaking out on the middle of I-10 and sure enough the belts had separated and let one tire balloon out, but I pulled over before it shredded. Replaced it with the spare and drove conservatively to Blythe, where I discovered another tire starting to separate. Something else I've learned is that when all the tires are the same vintage, they can fail within hours of each other.
Extreme used these special Carlisle Ultra Sport 235/60R14 tires (1820lbs capacity, 25.2" diameter, 7" rim) that nobody carries. I was able to cross them into ST205/75R14 radials (1760lbs, 26.1", 5" rim). I was worried about the increased diameter, but there is plenty of room in the fenders and they look right on the trailer even though they are skinnier.
Here is my question. I have always thought that radials are the hot ticket. However, when I told this story to my buddy on July 4th he said the secret to trailer tires that aren't used often is to go with bias ply. He said they will ride rough for 50 miles after sitting, but they never go bad? Opinions?
Wrong! I felt the shaking out on the middle of I-10 and sure enough the belts had separated and let one tire balloon out, but I pulled over before it shredded. Replaced it with the spare and drove conservatively to Blythe, where I discovered another tire starting to separate. Something else I've learned is that when all the tires are the same vintage, they can fail within hours of each other.
Extreme used these special Carlisle Ultra Sport 235/60R14 tires (1820lbs capacity, 25.2" diameter, 7" rim) that nobody carries. I was able to cross them into ST205/75R14 radials (1760lbs, 26.1", 5" rim). I was worried about the increased diameter, but there is plenty of room in the fenders and they look right on the trailer even though they are skinnier.
Here is my question. I have always thought that radials are the hot ticket. However, when I told this story to my buddy on July 4th he said the secret to trailer tires that aren't used often is to go with bias ply. He said they will ride rough for 50 miles after sitting, but they never go bad? Opinions?
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