bushrat
New member
Two years ago, I bought us a used aluminum trailer to haul our Spyder south in order to ryde in FL all winter. A friend had the trailer built to haul his own RT; he then got a toy hauler, and I bought his trailer for our F3L. It was in good shape, with decent rubber. He had made the return trip south 3 or 4 times; we have now done it twice. I always give the tires a quick view before heading out; I grease bearings at the same time. I thought we were in decent shape when we headed north on March 31st, on a planned 2-day 2300 km (1500 mi) drive back to Ontario. Tires seemed OK; a bit worn, but passable. One had a slow leak that I was monitoring/checking along the way. We arrived home safely on April 1. Turned out that we narrowly avoided catastrophe. No Joke!!!
The photos below explain how VERY, VERY LUCKY we were. Right side trailer tire went completely flat a couple of days later. When I removed to get it repaired, I was surprised to see the de-lamination that was starting. I checked the other side. It was still fully inflated, but had lost a sizeable chunk of tread. Amazing that neither tire suffered a blow-out on the Interstate. And, yeah, we were travelling along in the 'flow' at the limit (maybe even a bit more).
So, we were extremely fortunate. The agent at the tire shop where I have just bought two new tires suggested I should also be buying a handful of lottery tickets (seeing as how the 'lucky stars' were with us). All I can think of is: LET THIS BE A LESSON TO ME!!!
I pass it along to any others who might want to take more than a cursory look at their own trailer tires before setting out. I thought mine 'looked OK'. Obviously, they barely were. Curiously enough, these tires were 6 years old, and probably had no more than 35,000 km (22,000 mi) on them. Looks can be deceiving.

The photos below explain how VERY, VERY LUCKY we were. Right side trailer tire went completely flat a couple of days later. When I removed to get it repaired, I was surprised to see the de-lamination that was starting. I checked the other side. It was still fully inflated, but had lost a sizeable chunk of tread. Amazing that neither tire suffered a blow-out on the Interstate. And, yeah, we were travelling along in the 'flow' at the limit (maybe even a bit more).
So, we were extremely fortunate. The agent at the tire shop where I have just bought two new tires suggested I should also be buying a handful of lottery tickets (seeing as how the 'lucky stars' were with us). All I can think of is: LET THIS BE A LESSON TO ME!!!
I pass it along to any others who might want to take more than a cursory look at their own trailer tires before setting out. I thought mine 'looked OK'. Obviously, they barely were. Curiously enough, these tires were 6 years old, and probably had no more than 35,000 km (22,000 mi) on them. Looks can be deceiving.

