Tires And The Sun
The thread about trailer tires makes me wonder.
Why is it frequently suggested to cover a trailer or RV's tires to protect them from UV while they sit, but a daily driver is okay w/o a cover? The daily driver sees just as much sun. |
Re: Tires And The Sun
Great question... kinda like the old question "When you take aspirin, how does it know where you hurt"? :D
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Re: Tires And The Sun
I have covered my trailer tires for years. While it keeps them from weather cracking I don't think it makes the tire itself last any longer. Another way of saying it is that I have had old tires that look great and have lots of tread come apart out on the road.
Back in the day we had an open trailer with nylon truck tires. We never covered them and they got so old and weather cracked that chunks starting coming off the sidewalls. We replaced them finally just caused they looked so scary but we never had one fail. It was a heavy all steel trailer with a big box on front taller than the car. |
Re: Tires And The Sun
The truth is that ALL tires have a recommended "service life", no matter what they are installed on (or hanging from a garage wall!). The suggested life of a trailer tire is 6-7 years from the date of manufacture, whether or not the tread-depth indicators are showing. Sunlight accelerates the affects of chemicals in the air, mostly Ozone, from decomposing the rubber of the tire, which is why vehicles that don't see much use have their tires covered when not being used. One less chance for the tires to be damaged by natural causes.
Passenger and light truck tires have about a 10 year service life, depending on the manufacturers recommendations. I've replaced tires on vehicles after 10 years that looked like they could've lasted twice as long (based on physical condition), and had to remove others that had noticeable deterioration after only 5 years. That's why proper air-pressure, balancing and periodic tire rotation is so important. Bottom-line is to buy the best tires you can afford and maintain them properly. |
Re: Tires And The Sun
I had a 16" trailer tire that was stored either inside the trailer or in a garage and was 6-7 years old before it was ever "used". It "looked" perfect. But when I did use it as a spare, the entire tread peeled off of it like a banana before it had 2,000 miles on it! Luckily it still kept full inflation pressure and rode on the steel belts because I had to drive several more miles before I found a place to pull off to change it.
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Re: Tires And The Sun
Lew
Everything I've learned about tires over the years is exactly what you just said. Additionally, rubber deteriorates naturally and I suspect that it has to do with the way synthetic rubber is made. Synthetic rubber also does not get along well with steel tire belts and if the belts should get wet because of tire cracks, well, good luck. The cracks just allow more oxygen (ozone is a serious corrosive) and moisture to mix in the rubber. Loren:cool: |
Re: Tires And The Sun
I had bought a new three axle trailer in 07. The down turn hit and racing for me stopped. My trailer maybe had 2000 miles on it, if lucky. It sat parked, outside, at a friends place for years. I would pick it up at least once a year to clean and pamper the poor forgotten thing then put it back away.
After about five years of watching it age I decided to sell it. Going over things before delivering I noticed the 3 right side tires were cracked severely. The three lefts looked absolutely flawless. The difference was the right side had constant exposure to the sun. The left side was up against a building, shading it from the sun. I replaced the three on the right before selling , but advised that the lefts had age. |
Re: Tires And The Sun
Nitrogen filled trailer tires have helped in reducing higher tire temperature when traveling. Taking care of inside of tire may help as much as taking care of outside of tire. I felt leaving trailer in place and weighted down plays a part on tire fatigue in the area thats holding the load. Bottom of tire and constant sidewall stretching becomes damaged over time.
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