TIRES

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Rado101, May 25, 2014.

  1. Rado101

    Rado101 Bobtail Member

    20
    4
    May 26, 2013
    0
    Hi,does anybody have a experience with Ironman tires?
    My friend just buy two new Ironman tires for 540$ total.
    I tray to find it out the possible saving difference per year between Ironman tire for 270$ and Goodyear tire for 470$ each.
    Thank you very much.
     
    Last edited: May 25, 2014
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. rollin coal

    rollin coal Road Train Member

    13,574
    27,885
    Mar 29, 2008
    TN
    0
    They probably wear like pencil erasers. My buddy bought a truck with knee deep Chinese tread probably 30/32's a year and 70,000 miles later they had about 5/32's lol.
     
    D.Tibbitt, BoyWander, Lepton1 and 2 others Thank this.
  4. 201

    201 Road Train Member

    12,734
    26,187
    Apr 16, 2014
    high plains colorado
    0
    Hi Rado, tires, like anything else, you get what you pay for. I've never heard of iron man tires, maybe for a tag axle or something. I've tried them all for steer tires. The best mileage I got out of Michelin, but didn't like them on wet or slippery surfaces. Goodyear seem to cup after a while. Finally settled on Bridgestone, they were the best for the money, for my application.
     
  5. freightlinerman

    freightlinerman Road Train Member

    1,287
    536
    Mar 4, 2011
    Florida
    0
    I would never use an unknwon tire as a steer tire. Any where else is fine. BE CAREFUL, I talked to one driver who's dad bought some tires for a good price. They were all Armor All soaked and shiny. One lasted about 500 miles before it blew on a steer tire. From what he said, they were OLD surplus tires that some one bought and then resold for cheap. I've never heard of Iron man, that's scary.
     
  6. jbatmick

    jbatmick Road Train Member

    2,200
    2,510
    Dec 1, 2009
    hastings, Fl
    0
    GOOGLE is easy to use. Plenty of reviews / info.
     
    eeb and Rado101 Thank this.
  7. eeb

    eeb Heavy Load Member

    731
    268
    Mar 24, 2013
    0
    Mentioning the old tires, check the DOT date code. Near the bead, it'll start with DOT, then a line of letters and numbers, the last four being the date code. Week/week/year/year: 4208 would mean the forty second week of 2008- a bit old especially for steers. A three digit date code would mean it was made before 2000, I'd be hesitant to use it on the highway.
     
    jbatmick, Rado101 and rockyroad74 Thank this.
  8. rockyroad74

    rockyroad74 Heavy Load Member

    It's Michelin, Continental, or Goodyear(Dunlop) for me. You can get the national account discount price through OOIDA membership.

    I pick tires with the lowest rolling resistance ratings that fit the intended use in my tire size and have a good track record. I'll cut costs further elsewhere. Not by fixation on low initial cost of an unproven tire made in a country with a very poor reputation.
     
    Rado101 Thanks this.
  9. jbourque

    jbourque Heavy Load Member

    924
    553
    Oct 25, 2012
    south english iowa
    0
    semi retired you hit the nail on the head by saying the best for my application. depending on what you are doing can change the type of tire you will buy. b safe out there
     
    "semi" retired and Rado101 Thank this.
  10. Johny41

    Johny41 Road Train Member

    1,192
    1,020
    Feb 10, 2011
    Ontario, Canada
    0
    I have 1.3 mil miles; I used 3 sets of drives, in next 10-20k I have to buy 8 x new drives; original when the truck was new came with Bridgestone, and after I used 2 sets of Bf ; I'm going to buy BF again, not very expensive and ok; The more expensive original Bridgestone didn't last longer than the BFs; average I did 435,000 miles /set and I trade the tires all 8 before are completely gone and get better trade price. Are you guys getting any better?
     
    86scotty and Rado101 Thank this.
  11. freightlinerman

    freightlinerman Road Train Member

    1,287
    536
    Mar 4, 2011
    Florida
    0
    I've been a fan of the M726. When I worked at Ryder, there was a poster that touted over 500,000 miles from one set on a coast to coast operation, with frequent tire rotations and air pressure checks. 435k is REAAAALY good.
     
    Rado101 Thanks this.
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.