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just for you geoff weeks


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When I bought my F model from Tom Smith he replaced the front tires before we took It home. He wanted me to replace the rears, but I declined. They looked great even if they were old. Well two of them blew sitting in the garage.  Now it has new rear tires. Mike. 

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7 hours ago, yarnall said:

When I bought my F model from Tom Smith he replaced the front tires before we took It home. He wanted me to replace the rears, but I declined. They looked great even if they were old. Well two of them blew sitting in the garage.  Now it has new rear tires. Mike. 

That’s pretty much why I’m fixing to change all of them real soon 

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10 hours ago, yarnall said:

When I bought my F model from Tom Smith he replaced the front tires before we took It home. He wanted me to replace the rears, but I declined. They looked great even if they were old. Well two of them blew sitting in the garage.  Now it has new rear tires. Mike. 

Also haven’t considered tires blowing out just sitting there on account of age…. I’ll be looking into replacements real soon 

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Them cords have a few miles left in them.....😲

I put new drives on my truck this spring.  They were dated 2001.  Still looked brand new, but I knew I was rolling the dice every time I took it out.

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IMG-20180116-202556-655.jpg

Larry

1959 B61 Liv'n Large......................

Charter member of the "MACK PACK"

 

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Some of the old tractor tires get that way due to the liquid calcium they add for extra weight, but never seen it happen to a truck tire. I've seen stuff parked outside since the 40s have better looking tires than that! 

Edited by BOBWhite
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Sun (UV) and heat will age rubber badly.  

With a truck sitting in the sun with the tire exposed almost all the way around, the heat will build pressure in the tire during the day and lose it at night. The cycling every day up and down will age a tire sitting out for 20 years.  You can see the rubber is "crumbling" just from sitting.

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I went and looked a truck sitting in a guys driveway...It'd been sitting so long that the Pavement darknessed around it but was pale underneath it....The rear tires on the tandems looked liked you could take them and mold them like Clay with your hands....Guy looked at me a smirk and said if someone's serious I'll take 40 grand for my Truck!! I so wished at the time I'd had the money or a loan to call his bluff and watch him double take!! hahahaha 😆 😂 😆 😂 

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On 7/30/2024 at 12:19 PM, Geoff Weeks said:

Sun (UV) and heat will age rubber badly.  

With a truck sitting in the sun with the tire exposed almost all the way around, the heat will build pressure in the tire during the day and lose it at night. The cycling every day up and down will age a tire sitting out for 20 years.  You can see the rubber is "crumbling" just from sitting.

Since we have global warming that Al Gore invented, tires get aged quicker in the hot sun.

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Well, I checked the tires down at our local hillbilly shop and they said they only do cars and light duty trucks.he did recommend a couple of shops down town .: ok thanked him for his time I’ll start looking on line out of  curiosity.. bob

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