Trailer Tire Life

Crewdog

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 2, 2012
Messages
519
Fluid Motion Model
C-28
Vessel Name
Blue Merle
MMSI Number
367556050
I was just wondering what kind of mileage that folks have been getting from their trailer tires.

I know that maintaining proper pressure is important, and I check pressure before every trip I've taken so far.

I've always managed to get at least the rated mileage from any vehicle tires I've had in the past with proper inflation, rotation and balance.

Just thinking about when replacement tires may be necessary in the planning.

Good Spring Mornin' from Georgia,

Bill
 
Bill,

On multi-axle trailers tire wear is really unpredictable. Some folks are prone to jump a curb or two in tight turns and the weight you are carrying (Water, Fuel, Blackwater) have a big influence. I have friends claiming 30K and others going through way more than they ought to. Our R-29 does a real scrub job on the tires if you tweak too tight of a radius. Even though it is a 2009 Tug we really don't have 1200 miles on the tires yet but they should make 20K without a problem and I suspect with a bit better driving we might get more.

Pat & Carolyn, Ladybug, Too
 
The real problem with most trailer tires is not wear, but age. Most places recommend a change somewhere between 5 and 7 years due to environmental damage causing structural problems. Nothing will get you to believe that sooner than having a tread separate, even if the tire does not deflate. The damage that piece of high-speed rubber can cause in one or two seconds is hard to believe until you have experienced it.

I have extended that to my automobiles, too, since we drive minimal miles. I replaced the "80,000 mile" tires on our truck at 25,000, but 6 years old. They looked great, but I wanted no (uninsured, to boot!)visits to a body shop.
 
We have been getting around 20,000 miles (+/-) on a set of trailer tires, with Goodyear Marathon radials. When we had a blow-out on the boat trailer last fall, the guy that came out for our road service (kudos to BoatUS Trailering, btw) said that he had never changed a worn out tire on a trailer. I have been going with swapping out tires every 4 years - he recommended every three years. And, no, he didn't sell tires. 😉

Trailer tires live a tough life: lots of sitting around, getting "drug" around corners, sharp turning as you back into a space or a ramp.

After buying an IR thermometer, we found that the rear tires run a little hotter than the front tires on a dual axle trailer.

We keep our trailer tires inflated to the max recommended for the load.
 
Although we do not need new trailer tires yet, maybe by this time next year when we'll have close to 20,000 miles on the trailer. For planning purposes thou, I'd like to ask what the favored trailer tire brands are by those of you who have made trailer tire changes in the past? What brand, why you prefer this brand and or any tire brand you might avoid. With as many of us as there are towing our Ranger Tugs and Cutwaters around I thought this might be useful information for us to share.

Jim
 
Another point to consider, that will affect the tire life, is your towing speed.
At lot of the ST tires are rated for 65 mph max.
Our 28 ft fifth wheel has the Goodyear Marathons and I tow at about 62; better mileage and it is a comfortable speed.
 
Hi Jim,

We had been using Goodyear Marathons, but decided to upsize from 8 ply to 10 ply at our most recent tire change (last month); the Marathons were not available in 10 ply in our size. I went with Carlyle... somewhat reluctantly. The tire shop (Discount Tire, we've had good experience with them at different locations around the country) rated these as the best they carried. Our last experience with Carlyles was over 8 years ago, with a trailerable trimaran sailboat, and we got 8,000 miles on a set. With only 3,000 miles on this new set, no issue. Running even temps all around. No uneven wear. We'll see how this set wears.

The best we've done with a set of trailer tires is around 20,000 miles. I consider that decent with the hard life trailer tires live.

Like you, we generally tow at 60 - 62 mph, depending on traffic. Trailer tires are not rated at the same speed ratings as cars/trucks; speed/heat are real tire killers.

See you on the road - or the water! 😉

Best wishes,
Jim B.
 
Hi Bill

This doesn't give you an exact mileage but should help in your decision to buy new tires.

Here is a link to a site that has some good information on trailer tires and a code calculator.
You punch the DOT code on your tire and it will tell you when it was made.
http://recstuff.com/tireagecalculator.aspx
You should do this with new tires before you buy them also...There was a place near Seattle that sold "new" tires that were seven years old.

Happy Towing 🙂

Tony M
Molly M
R25 SC
 
Crewdog,

As others have mentioned, mileage on trailer tires is only one factor in judging when to replace the tires. In fact, I would suggest the following are the key factors, with generally the most significant factors closer to the top of the list:

1. Age of tires since manufacture, not when installed on the trailer
2. Signs of side wall cracking
3. Whether the tires have ever been run under-inflated
4. Sitting time un-used on the trailer
5. Multi-axle scrubbing that has occurred
6. Tread life remaining
7. Miles traveled on the trailer

I have an older uncle who still farms. On his farm equipment that is never used on a road/highway, he runs tires until they almost fall apart, regardless of age or tread depth. He knows that at slow speeds in a field, a tire failure is not catastrophic.

However, he also has had 3 different 5th-wheel RVs over the years. On those 5th-wheel RVs, he buys new tires every 2-3 years, regardless of tread depth or miles used, since he and his RV buddies have learned the hard way that tire failure on an RV trailer at 60-65 mph can be harrowing, along with a major inconvenience to deal with on a trip. Same is true with a boat on a trailer.

My experience with 2 different diesel-pusher motorhomes over 11 years and about 96,000 miles traveled is to always replace tires every 5 years or less, even with low mileage and/or good tread depth. These motorhomes use truck size tires, so after 5 years and many tens of thousands of miles the tread depth looks almost as if the tires are new. Most of my motorhome friends view tires the same way. A tread separation or blow-out on a motorhome pulling a toad is not something you want to experience. I suspect the same is true when pulling a trailer with a valuable Ranger Tug on it.

However, on my automobile tires, I've usually replaced tires after the tread depth approaches the limit, rather than considering mileage, years, etc. Auto tires seem to use up the tread depth before other factors become too important.
 
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