reelfishin
Captain
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2007
- Messages
- 3,050
Re: "trailer" tires
I'm assuming you are referring to it having a spoked galvanized rim, if so it's a trailer rim.
What they are referring to above is front wheel drive car rims being used on trailers, they tend to have the lug flange outboard near the outer part of the rim, not in the middle of the rim. (In other words if you were to mount them on a trailer, the tires would be in way too far inside the fenders, this is a weaker design rim not meant for heavy loads). The hub is the part that the rim bolts to and in which the bearings are located.
The cooper tires you showed are fine if they are rated to carry your load. multiply the total number of tires times the weight rating on the tires, I'd want the trailer's weight to be no more than maybe 75% of the sum of the tire rating.
I do notice that Cooper offers a very bare bones selection in tires, they don't offer any 13" and they don't seem to offer any heavier load range D tires. I have a good local dealer here and they can only offer me Chinese made tires in my sizes. I have a pair of bias ply Nanco tires that I just got that have a 1230 lb rating and are only A78-13 ST sized tires. They are marked Load range C and are bias ply tires. They made that trailer track and ride like when it was new, it was terrible with a set of Tow master Radials I had on it. I went with these since I both needed to lower the trailer a bit and didn't need any real weight capacity, they didn't have the lighter version of these so I went with the heavier rating for the same price.
They have about 500 miles on them now, I used the trailer to pickup a few boats out of state since it's all just been overhauled with new springs, tires, rims, bearings and lights.
The rims shown are brand new galvanized trailer rims from Load Rite.
I'm also a bit more comfortable running off road with bias ply tires as that they have a tougher sidewall that's less susceptible to punctures.
I find this coment interesting.
I'm running 4- Cooper ST 205-75R14 Special Trailer radials on a Tandem Loadrite trailer. The sidewall states a load rating of #1760 with a max. inflation rating of 35 psi. The hubs are slotted galvanized hubs that came stock on the trailer so I got to beleive that they're "trailer" hubs.
Any ideas?
http://coopertire.com/html/products...om_trailer&LanguageId=1&tiretype=S&sorttype=T
I'm assuming you are referring to it having a spoked galvanized rim, if so it's a trailer rim.
What they are referring to above is front wheel drive car rims being used on trailers, they tend to have the lug flange outboard near the outer part of the rim, not in the middle of the rim. (In other words if you were to mount them on a trailer, the tires would be in way too far inside the fenders, this is a weaker design rim not meant for heavy loads). The hub is the part that the rim bolts to and in which the bearings are located.
The cooper tires you showed are fine if they are rated to carry your load. multiply the total number of tires times the weight rating on the tires, I'd want the trailer's weight to be no more than maybe 75% of the sum of the tire rating.
I do notice that Cooper offers a very bare bones selection in tires, they don't offer any 13" and they don't seem to offer any heavier load range D tires. I have a good local dealer here and they can only offer me Chinese made tires in my sizes. I have a pair of bias ply Nanco tires that I just got that have a 1230 lb rating and are only A78-13 ST sized tires. They are marked Load range C and are bias ply tires. They made that trailer track and ride like when it was new, it was terrible with a set of Tow master Radials I had on it. I went with these since I both needed to lower the trailer a bit and didn't need any real weight capacity, they didn't have the lighter version of these so I went with the heavier rating for the same price.
They have about 500 miles on them now, I used the trailer to pickup a few boats out of state since it's all just been overhauled with new springs, tires, rims, bearings and lights.
The rims shown are brand new galvanized trailer rims from Load Rite.
I'm also a bit more comfortable running off road with bias ply tires as that they have a tougher sidewall that's less susceptible to punctures.