Tire carcasses

LostArra

WKR
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
4,335
Location
Oklahoma
I just returned from a week of lake living with our entire family in eastern Tennessee.. beautiful state, friendly people. Fishing wasn't great but I attributed that to being unfamiliar with water that clear.

On the drive home on I-40 from Knoxville thru Arkansas the road was literally covered with the remains of delaminated or blown truck tires. All looked to be from semis. I had started counting dead deer on the road in Tennessee (8) but switched to dead tires then completely lost count because there were so many.

Is there a tire manufacturing problem? Are truckers running tires until they are bald? Poor quality materials?
I would hate to be next to or behind a semi when one of the tires comes apart.

Car tires seem to rarely blow. My dad made sure we could safely jack up a car before we got a drivers license but changing a flat now is almost ancient history.
 
Next time you're that bored, just play the alphabet game instead. You can play as a team or split the car into left and right sides and play against each other. You can give each side of the car their 'side' of the road.
 
From my observations its shitty drivers that dont care if a tire blows. Its not thier equipment or money and they get paid by the load. So they grab and go. And if a tire blows, keep going
 
The number of times that a wrecker is called to our local Walmart to pull trucks and trailers off of the big rocks at the entrance, exits and off of the sign post in the parking lot crazy.
 
I would hate to be next to or behind a semi when one of the tires comes apart.
I've been next to two semi's as I was passing, that blew tires in my lifetime. It's like a bomb going off. The kind of thing that could scar a kid for life if they experienced it. I'll admit, I tend to accelerate when passing most vehicles, but even more so when passing semi's because of that.
 
Numerous reasons they blow..100’s thousand miles .. Wore thin…run over something …recaps are a major reason people buy them because they’re cheaper. In the beginning …Till you have a 700 dollar road repair along the road..Cars don’t weigh 80,000 pound is why blow outs are more violent in semis…We call those things you’re counting. Gators…and try not to run over them because they are heavy and can do alot of damage to cars…You’ll see alot more in the summer heat.
 
We just had some good heat in Arkansas, coupled with tires that were good enough to make it through winter, but can't handle the heat.

Happens every summer.
 
I spend a decent amount of time on both I-40 and 95 and see this a lot. It is definitely a safety issue. I’m sure that quality of components and a don’t give a damn attitude both contribute to the issue, but the sheer volume of miles driven under heavy loads also factors in.
 
I think it’s the Tennessee roads! I can’t count how many times I’ve driven I40 through Tennessee from one end to the other, and I’ve marveled every time about how bad the road is and how many potholes.
 
I just talked to my brother a few days ago and he told me that for the first time in his life he witnessed a semi tire blow. He was right behind a semi-truck and his rear tire blew right in front of him. He said it scared the living crap out of him - like a bomb going off! He was lucky, only some small shrapnel scraps hit his truck, the major large chunks flew of to the side.
 
I'd wager it is mostly related to statistical volume due to the sheer amount of truck traffic on I40 that really seems to peak in funneled congestion through OK and AR. Headed East, once you get to West Memphis AR, that traffic tends to disperse noitceably, either to other interstate systems or to the intermodal railyard in Memphis, Driving that stretch of I40 is incredibly frustrating: truck volume, trucks trying to pass each other with a 5mph speed advantage etc.
 
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