Are 2001 tires too old to trust?
#1
Are 2001 tires too old to trust?
So I recently purchased a 2001 Polaris 500HO that appears to have the original tires on it...they "seem" ok, good tread and all ...it was barely ridden by its previous owner. Great for the machine, bad for the tires (?) I have noticed dry rot cracks on the fronts around the lugs in the tread area. If this were an auto I would say no doubt they are trash. but this isn't a car. are they really trash? can I still trust them not to tear or split while out on the trail? This is the real dilemna...trustworthiness... Opinions?
#2
So I recently purchased a 2001 Polaris 500HO that appears to have the original tires on it...they "seem" ok, good tread and all ...it was barely ridden by its previous owner. Great for the machine, bad for the tires (?) I have noticed dry rot cracks on the fronts around the lugs in the tread area. If this were an auto I would say no doubt they are trash. but this isn't a car. are they really trash? can I still trust them not to tear or split while out on the trail? This is the real dilemna...trustworthiness... Opinions?
I once had a hole punctured in the sidewall of a tire that was about an inch long. I stuck three plugs in it and used fix-o-flat and rode it for two months before replacing.......LOL
#3
i'm running the factory tires on my 03 trailblazer. But I know both the previous owners and it never sat for more than maybe a couple weeks at a time. Mine have some of those cracks that you're talking about and pretty descent tread left and I haven't given them any thought really about blowing out other than the rooted trails I usual ride puncturing one. If you don't feel like you can trust 'em and don't have the extra $$ laying around for a new set, I'd do like tahoe said and get a plug kit maybe with an inflation tool or a can of fix-a-flat and see where they take ya. I would recommend for everyone to have some way to plug/patch a tire and fill it back up if you ride anywhere besides in the yard You can pick up a whole kit with tools, plugs, patches, pump(Co2 with hand backup), and whatever else in it for under $50... just my
#6
id run it ive seen people running 15 year old tires dry rooted and have no problem my tires on my 2003 outlander are starting to get pretty bad dry root but i just pound the crap out of them and dont worry about a flat if it happend im just getting new tires my front ones are almost like drag slicks but they still get me through the worst of mud holes
#7
I bought a 2002 last year with the original Goodyear Rawhides on it. about 50% tread. But when I wnet on a four day ride, they started to develope quite a number of pinhole leaks. Luckily I had two cans of fix a flat, but that only worked for a day. I spent the next day stopping every hour or so to air up the tires. If you are planning on any long rides out in the middle of nowhere I'd suggest getting some new tires. Just my opinion
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