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On 5/31/2012 7:50 AM, RAS56 wrote:
On a somewhat related note...trailer tire rotation...anyone do it? Not me. My long-standing rationale remains: until a vehicle (trailer/car) demonstrates uneven tire wear, I'm leaving everything in place. None of my/our trailers ever have. Some 20-ish years after the rig came into my hands, I eventually replaced the original (to me), cheapie, Zuni trailer tires with Redneck Trailer Supplies trailer radials at the same time I replaced the original (broken-torsion-springs) axle. That was maybe 10 years ago. The originals had lots of tread remaining (50%?), but even "frugal me" didn't find it hard to talk myself into a full reset with the new axle. The above entirely in the Rocky Mountain west... I bought 3 new trailer tires at the same time...2 of them have been on the trailer and one inside as the spare. I'm wondering if it would be a good idea to put the spare into use and equalize road wear and UV damage between the 3. Tire experts, want say you? I did the same (and as it turns out, the spare - as yours, stashed in the trailer - has always had a slow leak! Too slow to find/fix, in my lazy world.) "Equalizing wear" seems to me more effort than any demonstrated-need might ever be beneficial. - - - - - - FWIW - free anecdotal advice being worth every cent paid for it - I've owned only 2 cars in 40 years of driving, a '72 Maverick (it was my trailer tow vehicle) purchased new and sold in 2009, and a '90 econobox CRX purchased new and still the daily driver. Here's what I've done, tire-wise, with both... Ye olde Maverick had a full-size spare. After the first few years of youthful enthusiasm during which time I rotated all 5 tires, I subsequently rotated back-to-front only whenever wear suggested that to do so would maximize "set life". Unlike the Honda (see below), the Maverick "required" multiple rotations per tire set. The only non-puncture-related issue ever experienced with any Maverick tires was when I opted to use the (15+ year old?) spare "for a while" and it eventually delaminated, though not without sufficient warning to exit the interstate on which I happened to be traveling/retrieving myself. Prolly shouldna tried to use it as a long-term tire until I wore out the other rear tire! The Honda has a space-saver spare, a non-factor in any rotation scheme. Usually once per tire-set-life I rotate back to front, so's to get all 4 to wear out more or less simultaneously. It's never demonstrated a need for any wheel to be aligned, so after 213,000 miles it remains in its as-received alignment state. OEM tires aside, every set has lasted from 47,000 miles to 70,000 miles. Kinda-sorta related, a HUGE time-/money-saver for me - after the Big-O tire shop transitioned (for a while?) from internal patches to externally-inserted plugs - was becoming (initially, very reluctantly) comfortable with the concept of plugging holes from the outside. Once comfortable, I purchased a Do-it-yourself tire plug kit from Whale Mart, consisting of a rasp, "needle" and "gooey-lace plugs." In the 2 decades or so I've used it it's saved me beaucoup hours and miles of driving into town hassling with shops/lifts/"over-enthusiastic"-air-wrenches/unknown-people. For car tires up to R195-70x14, the do-it-yourself kit is: a) fast; b) effective; and c) cheap. By "effective" I mean 100% so for any puncture that any reputable shop would patch from the inside. I once plugged a Honda tire, by the side of the highway, in less than 15 minutes from pulling over to getting back underway, using the factory-supplied jack. The Maverick (no cigar lighter) required an air-tank or hand pump; I've a lighter-powered weenie pump for the Honda. I haven't bothered to keep track, but I've probably put 20 to 40 plugs in the aforementioned vehicles' tires. One Honda tire had 8 separate plugs before replacement for tread wear. (Living/driving on dirt roads in farming country leads to LOTS of "stuff" puncturing tires.) Having been unable to force the rasp through an 8-ply, 5th-wheel-pulled, flatbed trailer tire the one time I tried, I reckon there's an upper tire size limit to what any individual can plug with a Whale Mart plugger. YMMV, Bob W. |
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