Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard?

   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #11  
I keep track of tire age on my vehicles and trailers. I tend to err on the side of caution. If it were my truck, it would get new tires. Here is the Discount Tires position, which I where I get my tires. They would not service them. And yes, I have replaced tires based on age that looked brand new, such as spares which never hit the ground.

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   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #12  
5 years? Sheesh, I bet 1/2 the country's vehicles are riding on tires over 5 years old.
Another step towards “the wussification of America”
I have tires older than that on my truck and my stock trailer. I was mistaken. It’s 6 years on the date code where most tire shops recommend replacement.
 
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #13  
I bought a bumper-pull 14k trailer in 1997 I think. Still on the original tires today. Very few miles on the trailer - tread looks like the tires are brand new. Trailer is stored in my pole barn so not exposed to sunlight or to any fumes of any sort. Every time I hook on to it and pull it out of the barn I check the tires very carefully for any signs of deterioration. So far no sign of aging at all so until I see cracking or something like that I'm going to keep using those tires. Goodyear brand...but I don't remember the exact model.
 
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #14  
I've had the entire tread come off of one tire of my empty, dual axle dump trailer. Maybe 1500 miles on it, max. But 20 years old! Stored inside on concrete 99.9% of the time.
 
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #15  
I recently purchased a new to me 2011 travel trailer with the original tires where the tread looked like new. One tire had very minor cracks in the side wall near the bead and I've replaced them, keeping the spare. I've heard too many stories of people losing a tire while far from home and can't easily find a replacement. A few years ago I was ignoring the age if the tire looked good and lost a large chunk of the tread on tires I had bought used, ten years previously. I felt the bumping, got out and looked at all tires, truck and trailer. All looked good so I continued on my way, thinking I had a spark plug problem, jerking the truck. After another few miles at 60 MPH, I looked again to see the missing chunk but still holding air. Don't want to repeat that experience. My plan now is to run the new tires for about five years and then find a buyer for them to subsidize the purchase of new ones.
 
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard?
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Not sure where you are coming up with that price . . . $500 each should be easy to find ...
I'm talking with potential buyers. I am getting a *LOT* of feedback from truck operators that they won't touch my 11 year old tires with a 10 foot pole. They want me to replace them, or credit them so they can get it done. Some are worried of personal liability if they were hauling a load, blew out an 11-year old tire, and caused an accident.

Still curious-- if I replace them-- is there some other use for them? Kind of hard to sell a "set" of tires to use as a spare, but I'd be OK having one of these as a spare on my truck. Any other ideas?

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   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #17  
I was curious about the use of rubber in an average automobile tire vs a petroleum product.
Screenshot_20250823_130128_DuckDuckGo.jpg
 
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #18  
You do know that Michelins are a premium price tire, right?
Have you tried Continental, Good Year, etc?

I am pretty good at buying/selling tires.
IMO, if you feel scared about your tires, I would look for a set of deeply discounted take-offs on FBM, or a tire reseller.

I’ve had excellent success buying “new” old stock tires, maybe 2-3 years old.
I picked up a new set of tires for my Ram for $2,000. They were $3,000 new from dealers, by just keeping an eye on FBM for a couple months.

I take it these are for a motor home? Should be plenty of them out there for sale. Just look at the manufacturing date.
 
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard?
  • Thread Starter
#19  
   / Tires look brand new, but are 11 years old. Keep or discard? #20  
My brother in law had a set of Chinese made tires on his 5th wheel, he thought he would push the 5 year date, well he didn’t make it to the sixth year and when it blew out it took out the side of his trailer 🤬🤬!
 

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