To emphasize my point.. read the following and note how many times the phrase 'under inflated' is used to describe tire accidents:
I got these from pages at:
http://www.retread.org/Rubber/Statistics compiled by the U.S. Department of Transportation show that nearly all tires involved in any tire related accidents are
underinflated or bald. Properly maintained tires, whether new or retreaded, do not cause accidents.
As with passenger car tires, most problems with truck tires can be traced back to poor maintenance (
primarily underinflation) and abuse (overloading).
It is important to note that most of the rubber on the road comes from truck tires and is
caused mainly by underinflation, overloading, and tire abuse.
The exploding tire shown in the photo of the truck was NEVER retreaded. The tire was not damaged in any way, but it was deliberately run with an
insufficient amount of air pressure, as a result generating excessive heat which caused the tire to come apart. It took less than 50 miles to destruct.Photo 1 shows the original tread on a passenger car tire with part of the tread missing. The tread separated (came off) from the belt package of the tire.
Evidence that this tire was run underinflated is the excessive wear on
the outside edges of the tread area.
This is closely followed by problems caused by
underinflation, overloading, mismatching of tires on dual wheel positions and other improper maintenance and inspection procedures,
Just 20%
underinflation will reduce tire mileage by 16%, increase irregular wear (because the tire footprint is distorted) and cause extra heat build-up due to excessive sidewall deflection. Heat induced tire degradation reduces retreadability and makes the tire more prone to punctures (hot tires "suck up" puncturing objects).
See a pattern?
I got a Mountain Cur and a ~~pitbull~~ big loveable cuddle puppy and a Brown Husky aka 'Golden Dragon'
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