wae1
Senior Member
The tires on my coach are only about 4 years old and have approximately 11-15k miles on them (they were put on by the PO not long before I bought the coach. I've put 11k miles on it, but I don't know how many miles they went on these tires). As far as I am aware, there has never been any tire rotation done. The steer tires are exhibiting wear on the inside of the tire - one of them is actually showing the steel belting in a small spot on the inside. Let's get this out of the way: Yes, I am absolutely aware that the tire that's worn through to the belting must be replaced right away and I plan to do just that. Further, I intend to do a more thorough inspection of the other tire and I will replace it if it is too worn to be safe. Yes, I have verified the date codes on the tires and they are not aged out. Other than this inside wear, the tires do not exhibit any significant treadwear. There's no other damage to the tires (cuts, cracking, etc).
Before I just slap on new tires and go, I would like to try to understand what has caused that wear so that I can correct that and don't have to replace tires every 10k miles. I've had bad ball joints and bad wheel bearings on cars and light trucks before, but when I get the front wheels in the air, I don't feel any play in any direction. The alignment seems to be good; while I haven't had a shop check it, it tracks fine down the road with no steering input required to keep it straight. When I bought it, it was missing all of the front swaybar bushings and the airbags inside the coil springs were split open and totally deflated. It wasn't until about 1,500 miles ago that I put the new airbags in, but I did the swaybar bushings about 2,500 miles after I bought the coach. I've never heard of swaybars/lack of swaybars having any effect on tire wear, but could the lack of airbags have let the coach come down too much and too often on the front suspension causing excessive negative camber? Is that just the way these things wear tires and I need to be doing frequent tire rotations? Since it's a medium-duty truck suspension, does it take so much more back-and-forth and up-and-down force to deflect the wheel to diagnose wheel bearings/ball joints as opposed to a car or light truck? I'm not afraid of getting in there and pulling things apart, but I'd rather not just fire the parts cannon at it since I'm already in to this for at least a tire!
Before I just slap on new tires and go, I would like to try to understand what has caused that wear so that I can correct that and don't have to replace tires every 10k miles. I've had bad ball joints and bad wheel bearings on cars and light trucks before, but when I get the front wheels in the air, I don't feel any play in any direction. The alignment seems to be good; while I haven't had a shop check it, it tracks fine down the road with no steering input required to keep it straight. When I bought it, it was missing all of the front swaybar bushings and the airbags inside the coil springs were split open and totally deflated. It wasn't until about 1,500 miles ago that I put the new airbags in, but I did the swaybar bushings about 2,500 miles after I bought the coach. I've never heard of swaybars/lack of swaybars having any effect on tire wear, but could the lack of airbags have let the coach come down too much and too often on the front suspension causing excessive negative camber? Is that just the way these things wear tires and I need to be doing frequent tire rotations? Since it's a medium-duty truck suspension, does it take so much more back-and-forth and up-and-down force to deflect the wheel to diagnose wheel bearings/ball joints as opposed to a car or light truck? I'm not afraid of getting in there and pulling things apart, but I'd rather not just fire the parts cannon at it since I'm already in to this for at least a tire!