Why Retreads are Popular on Trailers
Since the advent of reliable retread programs, many fleets put retreads in trailer and tag axle positions, since these are less demanding applications than steer or drive applications.
Cost is a significant advantage of retreading, notes Phil Arnold, field engineer, customer engineering support, Michelin Americas Truck Tires. “For fleets that choose to retread, they can save themselves significant amounts of money when managed properly. Retreads can perform similar to a new tire for much less.”
For Tom Clauer, corporate manager of commercial and OTR product planning for Yokohama Tire, the very nature of trailer tire applications, and the abuse they take, are a primary reason for fleets to consider retreads in trailer and tag positions.
Once the tires are on a trailer or tag, they become subject to many hazards such as curbs and other obstacles that other positions are not. Considering those hazards, Clauer says retreading can be a good way to help stretch operating budgets further and overcome some of these road hazard losses.
Clauer says depending on the application, trailer tires can last 200,000 miles before it’s time to retread or retire them – although tougher applications may only see 40,000 miles. “Operations that run long hauls and fully loaded a majority of the time normally get more miles out of their trailer tires,” he explains. “And naturally, regional, urban, on/off operations experience more turns and turns equal sliding of trailer tires as well as being subject to more hazards.”