MickinMO Posted August 18, 2018 Posted August 18, 2018 So the boat I bought earlier this year has trailer tires that are max rated for 50psi at the max load. Tires were basically new as previous owner kept boat at a marina Iam under max load and started using them at 45psi. Had some edge wear so went up to the 50psi. However, even at 50psi I am getting wear on the egdes that tells me they are under inflated. I suppose I need to get them balanced to keep chasing the issue or is it ok to go another 5psi up?
fishinwrench Posted August 19, 2018 Posted August 19, 2018 I wouldn't go above 50psi. Are you sure the tires aren't too narrow for the wheels ? MickinMO 1
Gavin Posted August 19, 2018 Posted August 19, 2018 Dunno, trailer tires are cheap. Just replace them. Usually order on the rim and delivered to my house for $100 a pair. Etrailer.com in Wentzville, MO is great. Smalls21 and MickinMO 1 1
MickinMO Posted August 19, 2018 Author Posted August 19, 2018 It is on both edges of both tires. However, outside edges are slightly worse than inside edges
tjm Posted August 19, 2018 Posted August 19, 2018 Try a couple different tire gauges, some of them tell lies. Did you scale that trailer loaded? Can you upsize the tire/wheel? Whatever is causing that wear (I'm thinking over load or under inflated-but you need to decide which) won't just go away when you replace the tires unless new tires & rims increase your load range. MickinMO 1
MickinMO Posted August 19, 2018 Author Posted August 19, 2018 7 hours ago, tjm said: Try a couple different tire gauges, some of them tell lies. Did you scale that trailer loaded? Can you upsize the tire/wheel? Whatever is causing that wear (I'm thinking over load or under inflated-but you need to decide which) won't just go away when you replace the tires unless new tires & rims increase your load range. I have not weighed it, but I would hope that Lowe within the last five years didn't engineer a package that overloaded their trailer. I can't think of anything that would be significant added weight post factory to cause this. Will continue to monitor wear at 50psi. Could just be crappy tires I suppose. Thanks for the tips fellas.
jdmidwest Posted August 19, 2018 Posted August 19, 2018 I always try to upgrade the tires on my trailers to radial if possible. The ones that come on trailers stock tend to be low end and wear fast if you pull them long distances. Cheap tires are great if you live 10 minutes from fishing waters. But pulling one 5 hours on the interstate will heat them up pretty good. MickinMO and nomolites 1 1 "Life has become immeasurably better since I have been forced to stop taking it seriously." — Hunter S. Thompson
fishinwrench Posted August 19, 2018 Posted August 19, 2018 I'm guessing either the tire is too skinny for the wheel, or the tires have wimpy sidewalls. MickinMO 1
MOPanfisher Posted August 19, 2018 Posted August 19, 2018 New trailers are probably like new trucks. They put the cheapest thing they can on them. I always put radials on them as well when the first set wears out. MickinMO 1
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now