The trailer I bought was used as storage for at least a year or two by a local hitachi plant.
When I bought it, the tread on the tires was more than legal. But, there were signs of dry rot. I ran them with weight for the last six months with zero blow outs. But, four of the eight either developed flat spots or weird wear bumps so I replaced them.
If the tread is legal, keep an eagle eye on the air pressure, run them and watch them every single day. Change the tires when the wear is uneven or the tread gets below dot standards.
I'd rotate those steers to the drives and start fresh with new steers. No one wants to chance steers under weight.
How long are tires good?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Dino soar, Jun 26, 2018.
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First thing I’d do is get the date code off of them. Next is are the drives new or caps? Are they name brand or overseas?
Then look at them real close all the way around. Inch by inch.Dino soar Thanks this. -
Run them. It takes some guys way more time than that to wear them out. As long as they aren't all dry rotted out you are fine
Dino soar Thanks this. -
I took a closer look at them today and I don't see any dry rot on them anywhere.
I'll look for the code next and I'll see if the rears are retreaded or not. -
Once you get all the facts together, then it makes it easier to make a good informed logical decision.
Dino soar Thanks this. -
I would not run any tire that had been sitting for 5 years mounted outdoors except maybe on a local only trailer.
Just my 2 cents, I never made any money trying to nurse miles out of questionable rubber.Dino soar Thanks this. -
First two numbers are the week,
last two are the year.
For example a code of 2416 would be the 24th week of 2016.Dino soar Thanks this. -
I'd be more concerned about the rest of the #### on that tractor.
5 years is a long time to sit, I would worry about corrosion and other things like belts and hoses dry rotting too.Dino soar Thanks this. -
All belts hoses everything will be brand new including all wheel and driveline seals.Last edited: Jun 27, 2018
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If a tire blows you will have twice as much into a road service to get a sub quality single replacement as what you could have bought 2 brand new steers,
As far a Recaps
I am tired of you guys crap Blowing apart on the Ohio turnpike soon as we Turn it up to 75.
Should make you Recap buyers pay a fee for cleaning up the road and paying for the damage when that pile of 3rd world barely attached 20 pound Hunk goes flying a 100 feet in the air
Quality new tires are the Cheapest insurance you can buy in this business.
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