Gunfreak25
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I am willing to bet most of our trucks have some weatherchecking on the tires. We all know you run the best tires on the front axle, that is just common sense on a large manual steering truck.
This question pertains more to the duals. As I see it, duals are great because it allows you to run your worst tires on the rear, you carry 4 spares with you at all times, lastly the rear tires see very little stress on an unloaded vehicle due to all the ground contact area. I think someone said the rears literally "float" at max speed on pavement.
But where you do draw the limit on tire condition even for rear use? I've seen some tires where the sidewalls were peeling off, some are just slightly weather checked all around on both sides. Has anyone suffered a blow out on a rear tire due to dry rot?
This question pertains more to the duals. As I see it, duals are great because it allows you to run your worst tires on the rear, you carry 4 spares with you at all times, lastly the rear tires see very little stress on an unloaded vehicle due to all the ground contact area. I think someone said the rears literally "float" at max speed on pavement.
But where you do draw the limit on tire condition even for rear use? I've seen some tires where the sidewalls were peeling off, some are just slightly weather checked all around on both sides. Has anyone suffered a blow out on a rear tire due to dry rot?