After seeing them take a die grinder to the already broken inner steel cords of the tire, it makes perfect sense why you see these things scattered over the highways like dead animals. My dad ran recaps once, blew out, and took the side of the truck bed with it. Never again. Low speed low temperature operation, like an inner city garbage truck, yeah, maybe. Open highway across Arizona, no fucking way.
Kristian Jordet stop claiming bullshit you probably never handled them at all i guess. Those tires are dangerous, and several tests always show the same result, they are not to be trusted. And if you arent completely dumb, then you would have seen in the Video WHY that is. Only inspected by eye for damages of the Mesh. The mesh gets drilled and grinded, weakening it even more. It is NOT possible by eye inspection to see if the mesh is damaged below the surface of the tire.
@Okay Dokey You can do what the fuck you want for my sake, and it's much possible it's different in the rest of the world, but here in Norway, they are 99% secure. I don't really care what you "guess" or what you think.
When a truck tire starts to break apart on the highway you'd better get out of the way. I've seen the heavy rubber fly across 2 lanes only to smash into oncoming trafic injuring 2 families. This remolding of old dry rot tires is an accident waiting to happen.
don't know how I ended up watching this.. I work at a retread shop and stare at this stuff 8-10 hours a day... I started on RUclips an hour and a half ago watching different techniques on making beef jerky!
+Microwaved Gerbil Absolutely I worked in transportation and we were forbidden from purchasing recaps for out power units or trailers. They never last.
retreads and remolded tires are different..... retreads just have new tread glued (vulcanized) on, where remolds have the tread heat molded like they do with a new tire
+Gold Winger more or less, remolded tires are just as good as new tires. i work with new, used, and remolded tires every single day and i've seen more used tires fail than i have remolded. now retreaded tires, i see fail all the time.
+Aluminum Cloud Its not only these tyres that delaminate, it happens to non remoulded/re-treaded tyres too. Have had it happen many times on trailer tyres in the past.
This tires are more than good for farmers, or slow motion trucks going 40-50 km's. This tires are extremely expensive if you wanna buy a new one. Nothing dangerous for these purpose, but not recommended for international truck transport, where a camion is driving 140-160 km/h, and not recommended for normal cars.
There are more new tires that fail than remolded. At least in the western world. I have run with remolded tires on my rig for 15 years. Never any problem. The statistics are a brainwash attempt from the large tire manufacturers. :)
Do those manufacturers also drive around throwing shredded retreads on the side of the road, to make it seem like they're always blowing up? LOL. Every truck driver i've ever known has said the same thing, retreads are terrible. And as a motorcyclist, i think they should be outlawed on the interstates.
I don't know in which part of the world you live. In Europe, most of the shredded tires we have on the side of the road are from new tyres having failed. Maybe the retreads where you live are of a poor quality :)
This product should be outlawed. This poses a major hazard to motorcyclists. But hey, it's a good idea because it saves me money! Fuck other people's safety! It hasn't been made illegal yet, so 'll just keep using it!
i dont think it should be banned... only regulated so that trucks that actualy drive on public roads faster than 50km/h should not use them. I Bet most tires that blow up on road are remolded ones..
Atis Bariss For transporting hazardous goods, remolded/retreaded tires are not permitted. These tires should only be used on mail trucks or other local-only vehicles like inner city buses. They should be stamped with "not for highway use" on the sidewall. Speed generates heat which can cause these remolded tires to fail.
I remember hearing about a story how one of these molds launched into the air off a semi's wheel and pierced a lady's windshield within the opposing traffic on the highway. The mold was effectively turned into a 140 mph missile
+Clutch180 Yea they can be dangerous. Should only use these for low speed inner city runs. Never anything on the interstate or other roads beyond 55mph.
+The Product Anyone who's ever driven an interstate sees these carcasses all over the place... they may be fine for inner city low speed runs, but they are garbage for anything else. You're also not allowed to use them on steering tires, or school buses. That should tell you something about their reliability.
+kleetus92 yes you will see some tread that has separated from the carcass, that type the tread is glued on. You will see some failures but their are FAR more tires out there NOT failing..This video shows a "REMOLDING" type of recap.. They dont separate like the Glue on treads do..
+Raven4122 Wasn't aware they have 2 different types of recaps, never heard of the glue on tires. Are the remolded tires approved for use on steering tires or school buses?
bob hope Generally, consumer grade tires used on passenger vehicles are not re-worked like this. This process is reserved for larger truck and construction vehicle shoes that cost thousands to replace and can contribute greatly to the overall overall operating expense of said vehicle. You basically should never use re-worked passenger tires. Also, your situation sounds like you had a catastrophic failure of the tire core. Probably bad manufacturing.
bob hope that's probably the reason I see a lot of tires on the freeway from large trucks, they probably use those tires to save money, but they are just more dangerous to the public!!! should be illegal, I few times I saw those tires exploding
Ouch. I wouldn't dare put remoulds on my Audi. I know they say that tires don't matter, but they really do! I wouldn't put anything but Pirelli from the P series on mine. Those things last years with constant highway usage!
Just average people. I wasn't saying it as a whole. I've had tons of people, even mechanics tell me tires don't matter which is the biggest lie I've ever heard.
Back then things were different.Still drove home about a couple of miles as the tyres didn't deflate.Paid £7.00 each back then.What a cheapskate i was.
I ran duct taped tyres once on my bicycle when i was a kid, though, since the duct tape makes the tyre 'slick' it would go faster like Formula 1 slick tyres do....
Debbiebabe69 yeah that's a no. The reason slicks are better for traction is because they are made of a very soft compound, and they have no tread, making a much larger contact patch on the ground. They have no direct impact on speed(besides traction). And no. Your duct tape slicks do nothing apart from making you look poor.
Years ago, i used to see the retread skins all over highways. I have not seen one in Years, so the skin must adhere better. Come to think of it, i do not see mufflers, or roadster roof tops on the side of the roads anymore either.
+David James In 1 year I've went through 7 re-treads because they blew apart, mind you my unit has 8 axles and 30 tires... so maybe that's not to bad. But you dont see caps all over the highway any more because they're usually run over a multitude of times and fly off the road.
If you dont like retread tires, dont whine about it on youtube, shut up and buy new ones. ive run retreads for years woth no problems at all, re-CAPS are the scary ones.
+Wildman of the Wynooch drive down any highway. I counted 392 casings by the side of the road on the way to the airport. I've seen recaps come apart and cause a wreck. (truck hooked hard left, went off road, cab and trailer flipped sideways) friend of mine had a recap take out her windshield. (not through but destroyed the windshield)
@ Monel Funkawitz Not say Remolds are better. Just a little known truth most the of the tire or gator tails are from factory tires not properly inflated or having too much wight on them. That's from the NHSI
I'd never buy such garbage! I'm not trusting old patched up tires. I get new, premium ones every time. They might cost more, but new tires are worth every penny!
+megadriver6 I would only buy these to do burn outs with in my car(yes they also make these for some cars) They are cheap and I dont care if they blow during the burn out
I paid 500 doller for new tires,i replaced every tires,yes its expensive but hey there are peoples driving on the road,im feel more safe with new tires.......
Looks good but is it any better then retreads from 20 to 30 years ago. It would be nice to be able to reuse tires over and over again. Save on all the land fills overflowing with tires that are an eyesore. I still see lots of retreads on the highways that have come off of these big trucks. Nice video. Thanks for sharing.
BullrockMcHammergeil yes, it's true. and sometimes the pieces on the road get accidents to cars on the road, and no way to know about the responsible of this mess. So it's good to be illegal - it's unsafe. =/
As example: Opel is also German and it's not even near the other car's brand quality. here, also, it's all a question on money traded by some quality. Theses tires falls apart on the high way (and very dangerous), and it's well known to any car driver.
How many have you actually PERSONALLY examined? Because unless and until you do, YOU HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA IF THE FAILED TIRE IS A RETREAD! (If there are steel wires in the cap, it isn't.)
A lot less than i used to see 20 or 30 years ago. I can only conclude the technology / polymers/resins and quality checks have improved. Roads used to be littered with these hazards. Ni drive us95 in the northeast and southeast, and i do not recall seeing any in years? Better road cleanup? Mayb, but i doubt it.
If you want really safe use brand new quality tires, using remolded tires increasing your life into risk. some cases using brand new turns faulty due to factory defective much more if you used remolded. But in this video only shows how it's made remolded tires to inform people what quality they do it. Here in the Philippines their using a free casted molded rubber and attach into cleaned old tire with adhesive rubber glue. I think much more quality I saw on this video than what they do in my Country, wishing they should watch this video to enhance their skills.
Hi Laurel Mungcal, I'm Tuan from Vietnam, I would like to build an old tire recycling line, you can share experiences and equipment in Philippine. could you share the information via my phone number 84904222568, and my mail tuannguyenta81@gmail.com Thanks
If you look at the treads you will see they are off road tires. Not for highway use. Most likely construction vehicles, or forestry vehicles, etc. People in the construction industry do this to save money and the equipment they use the tires on rarely hit speeds of more than 25kph. So blow outs aren't an issue like they are with higher speeds and on the highway.
I have been reading the arguments on the practicality of retreaded tires and as a technician who worked for a short time in the industry I agree with views on both sides! However there are different methods and technologies in this industry. I believe this was a "Bandag" or Goodyears "Wingfoot" type retread. I worked at TCI tire in south Nashville which used Michelin technology. Michelin has a similar approach with exception of using x-ray to inspect casings and the tread is reapplied in a single rubber strip that is applied after the carcass has been skived filled and patched. Then the tire is placed in a sleeve that applies pressure from the inside of the tire pushing out and the tread covering applies pressure to force adhesion while it is placed in a vacuum chamber with i believe as many as 60 plus tires to cure at 450 degrees for an hour. Here are some factors that play in part of the safe use of retreaded tires season- retreads and any tire can and will fail with the combination of low pressure and high temps! Use- Majority of retreads never see highway but used in off road conditions where tire longevity and expense is an issue with road or trail conditions. Retreads are allowed on rear tractor axles and trailer axles and never on steers! Retreads are only as good as the casing they are built on! Casing junk? Retread will fail! So are these tires junk? No they have their purpose! One is recycling! Reuse is the best way. I will invite anyone to go by a retread car or truck tire and be amazed at their longevity. Its all opinion and experience. For those that base their opinion solely on this video< I encourage them to volunteer to pick up some blown carcasses or "Gators" of the highways.
See those tires laying on the side of the road, 98% of them are remolded. My boss bought three remolded tires and placed them on my truck, lost all three in a week, heat wave was a factor , worst part was losing one during hill descent with close to 40ton load.
I kept my mountain bike tyres at too high a pressure and now the sidewall has started to split and the inner tube bulged out and exploded. (I lack street credibility) So basically I'm an idiot which has resulted in me leading an idiotic life. Needless to say, women are not the slightest bit interested in me except for meaningless sex. So, in conclusion, I love being an idiot!
+John von Horn It happened at work and by boss thought we were under attack from terrorists and ran for cover shouting, "shots fired, shots fired, man down!" If I worked for Trump he'd call me into the boardroom and say, "I don't want to deal with an idiot, you're fired"
The process is called vulcanization not polymerization and its kindly scar that rubber is applied to spots with bare steel wire. The rubber around steel wires is formulated to adhere to brass plated steel. This movie is scary
I did this myself several years ago, but it was a lot more "archaic" in the cap shop where I worked, First of all we only did each step once, the inspection, buffing, skiving, gluing, capping, and then cooking. Second, we actually didn't do any of the steps with the sides of the tire, only treads, and during the gluing phase it wasn't small strips, it was that big strip you see used on the sides here. Third, We actually used huge pressure cooking ovens, instead of what the video shows.
Just what I was thinking. A quick google search suggests over £200 per tyre (re-moulded), so assuming the refurbishing process takes about 2 hours per tyre, they could be making huge profits, especially if they get the tyres free in the first place. Furthermore, they may be provided with bursaries for this kind of thing, seeing as reinforced tyres can't be easity recycled.
As an ASE master technician, I plead to anyone that is viewing this: Please, I BEG YOU, please! tell everyone you know about the dangers of retreaded tires. SAY NO TO RETREADS!!!
kingoftaurus Obviously not the best thing, but they've been using re-treads for years... there's also a reason they're illegal to have on the front wheels...
Ziah Jolléy WHAT video did you watch? @ 1:50 to 2:20 that is clearly broken cords and a HOLE that goes clear through the casing, requiring a patch to be applied to the inside of the casing, so the (POS) casing has some chance of holding some air. "slightly damaging the steel ply " is that how you refer to a section of completely severed steel cords ? I have a lot of really good "slightly damaged" stuff that I would like to sell to you !!!
Ziah Jolléy Yah, I watched the video. AND I saw the part where they run a carbide burr clear through the tire casing in the tread section. It is NOT a tight fit as the burr is plunged into the hole and they start wallowing the hole out even bigger to clean things up. Broken cord is visible. What video did you watch? Funny thing. They put that steel cord in the tire for a reason, and the reason is because it is needed to handled the heavy loads of heavy trucks. Otherwise they could just make tires out of used chewing gum. When the cord is broken, it can no longer lend any strength to the tire. Support is why the tire employs steel cords in its construction to beef it up, If steel cords were not need they would not be in there, and the tire could just use aggregate mineral fill for its construction. But they do not do that, and the reason is because it would not work very well, just like this tire is a gamble that is not going to hold up when its expose to higher demands of it operation conditions. That is why a tire like that should be thrown away, and hopefully it was never installed on the front of a truck because its just a ticking clock for a blow out.
Guys, it's illegal to run re-treads on front.. it's flat out dangerous at that point. However well they maybe less reliable, re-treads have been around for awhile, and relatively safe on the rear tires and dual.
UPS is running recaps for steer tires on there trucks...why? Keep cost down. Remember when you never saw a dirty UPS truck? Now it's all the time. It's always about the $$$$ forget safety
Mark Running recaps on the steer tires is not DOT legal. Where did you come up with that info? No trucks in the US run recaps on the steers. With the amount of random highway patrol stops on trucks no one would get away with that.
people who say these arent safe have no clue the 160 degree heat and compression will totally mend the rubber together like new and a small gap in the wires under the tread does not weaken them at all you could have 8+ puncture repairs in a tyre and it would still be fine
The polymerization isn't reliable, especially in low end shops. The strip will sometimes completely come off destroying the tire which would potentially cause the driver to lose control. That's why you see so many strips of tires on the road.
That's why it's illegal to use remold tyres as steering tyres. Properly remold tyres are quite safe as load-bearing non-steering tyres. The keyword, of course, is "properly". Too many recap/remold shops cut corners too much.
Are these what end up on the road from semi trucks? Everyone I know has had damage from these road debris. Should tack on stiff extra taxes for businesses like these.
It is 60 more likely to have a blow out and almost guaranteed to loose the its tread all over the highway. They dont recommend driving them in highway. You saved about $80 and then it blows out on the highway 8k miles later costing you a $300 service call assuming it was during the day. What a smart investment
$300 service call, possibly millions if you cripple or kill other people. Your life it too precious to skimp on tires. After all, they're the only things touching the road.
Those are the same tires that fly apart on the Thruway and smash through your windshield. Been there! If you travel on a long trip, look along the side of the road. All those black chunks are recapped tire shrapnel. You will see miles of them.
Have to say this looks far better than normal retreaded truck tyres but I might be wrong. Nice to see they are recycling tyres just hope they are safe.
A lot of people are commenting that this is dangerous but from what I understand most airlines use re-moulded tyres so presumably it must be safe because aircraft take off and land much faster than road vehicles and we don't hear of incidents with tyre blowouts.
Khaee Nearly 100 percent of the world’s airlines use retreaded tires. 80 percent of the tires used by the commercial aviation industry are retreaded. www.goodyear.eu/ro_ro/images/Next%20Tread%20Tyre%20Line%20Up.pdf
they are perfectly safe, i use these daily. These are remolded, not rethreaded. big difference. Also they last way longer than a brand new chinese tire
what the fuck i am doing with my life...
+Aleestorm We should form a self-help group
im after i watch how toothpicks are made
Aleestorm
Joe Blo
Bro i got the same qwestion but no one is anwering 😭
Can't believe they used an old tire with 2 bad places on the tread! Those must be the ones I always see blown out on the freeway.
You there, revulcanize my tires, POST HASTE!!!
How can I download this for educational purposes
Anyone else is lost in the internet ?
I was looking for ketchup, somehow i ended up here.
sim! ;/
I was on facebook and I don't have any fucking idea of how i ended up here. But it was very educative.
I'm not lost, I'm on an adventure!
*****
"I feel like Mike watches a lot of the History Channel" -after explaining why only the inside of a drink can burns
I've seen this before on youtube and somehow found myself back here again. Watched the whole thing again too hehe.
+simonriddick Same here
Yep, same...
u
+simonriddick what are we doing with our lifes ...
ich weiß es nicht :(
After seeing them take a die grinder to the already broken inner steel cords of the tire, it makes perfect sense why you see these things scattered over the highways like dead animals.
My dad ran recaps once, blew out, and took the side of the truck bed with it. Never again.
Low speed low temperature operation, like an inner city garbage truck, yeah, maybe. Open highway across Arizona, no fucking way.
+kleetus92 exactly!
+kleetus92 well recaps just have new tread glued onto the old tire and its not vulcanized like remolds.
On a conventional cap, yes, it is. The few that are not (Bandag's cold-caps) are, if anything, better.
Holy Fuck!!
This is actually illegal in my country, I don't understand why is legal in the US.
It's late and I'm on that part of youtube again
same
Delta_STW5 j
Probably 30-60% less safe too. I'd rather get new tires.
Wrong. They work as hell
Whoaa! Easy mate! I've handled a many houndred of theses tires, and they do their duty!
Kristian Jordet
stop claiming bullshit you probably never handled them at all i guess.
Those tires are dangerous, and several tests always show the same result, they are not to be trusted. And if you arent completely dumb, then you would have seen in the Video WHY that is.
Only inspected by eye for damages of the Mesh.
The mesh gets drilled and grinded, weakening it even more. It is NOT possible by eye inspection to see if the mesh is damaged below the surface of the tire.
@Okay Dokey
You can do what the fuck you want for my sake, and it's much possible it's different in the rest of the world, but here in Norway, they are 99% secure.
I don't really care what you "guess" or what you think.
When a truck tire starts to break apart on the highway you'd better get out of the way. I've seen the heavy rubber fly across 2 lanes only to smash into oncoming trafic injuring 2 families. This remolding of old dry rot tires is an accident waiting to happen.
don't know how I ended up watching this.. I work at a retread shop and stare at this stuff 8-10 hours a day... I started on RUclips an hour and a half ago watching different techniques on making beef jerky!
+gary buskirk Remeating animals :D
gary buskirk HELL YEA!!!!
gary buskirk )
this is why you see scraps of tread on the side of the road, they peel off, these are not safe.
+Microwaved Gerbil Absolutely I worked in transportation and we were forbidden from purchasing recaps for out power units or trailers. They never last.
+Microwaved Gerbil Actually no. Retreads and new truck tyres have about the same failure rate according to statistics.
retreads and remolded tires are different..... retreads just have new tread glued (vulcanized) on, where remolds have the tread heat molded like they do with a new tire
+Gold Winger more or less, remolded tires are just as good as new tires. i work with new, used, and remolded tires every single day and i've seen more used tires fail than i have remolded. now retreaded tires, i see fail all the time.
+Aluminum Cloud Its not only these tyres that delaminate, it happens to non remoulded/re-treaded tyres too. Have had it happen many times on trailer tyres in the past.
This tires are more than good for farmers, or slow motion trucks going 40-50 km's.
This tires are extremely expensive if you wanna buy a new one. Nothing dangerous for these purpose, but not recommended for international truck transport, where a camion is driving 140-160 km/h, and not recommended for normal cars.
In some countries trucks can't go faster than 100km/h so not that bad for that either ...
There are more new tires that fail than remolded. At least in the western world. I have run with remolded tires on my rig for 15 years. Never any problem. The statistics are a brainwash attempt from the large tire manufacturers. :)
Do those manufacturers also drive around throwing shredded retreads on the side of the road, to make it seem like they're always blowing up? LOL. Every truck driver i've ever known has said the same thing, retreads are terrible. And as a motorcyclist, i think they should be outlawed on the interstates.
I don't know in which part of the world you live. In Europe, most of the shredded tires we have on the side of the road are from new tyres having failed. Maybe the retreads where you live are of a poor quality :)
This product should be outlawed. This poses a major hazard to motorcyclists. But hey, it's a good idea because it saves me money! Fuck other people's safety! It hasn't been made illegal yet, so 'll just keep using it!
Ive never heard of it happening to bike tires, its different for HGV's so hence why its allowed
i dont think it should be banned... only regulated so that trucks that actualy drive on public roads faster than 50km/h should not use them. I Bet most tires that blow up on road are remolded ones..
motorcyclists should be outlawed! They poses major hazard to other citizens.
keimo2007 lol how so?
Atis Bariss For transporting hazardous goods, remolded/retreaded tires are not permitted. These tires should only be used on mail trucks or other local-only vehicles like inner city buses. They should be stamped with "not for highway use" on the sidewall. Speed generates heat which can cause these remolded tires to fail.
Polymerization :D I use Polymerization to fuse Old worn out tire with new tire tread to summon New Tread Tire
و
تسويق
ؤ
I counter your New Tread Tire with Summer Freeway, with a full three thousand attack points! New Tread Tire is destroyed!
Yugo Shoukan! Blue-Eyes Ultimate Dragon!
I remember hearing about a story how one of these molds launched into the air off a semi's wheel and pierced a lady's windshield within the opposing traffic on the highway. The mold was effectively turned into a 140 mph missile
+Clutch180 Yea they can be dangerous. Should only use these for low speed inner city runs. Never anything on the interstate or other roads beyond 55mph.
+The Product Anyone who's ever driven an interstate sees these carcasses all over the place... they may be fine for inner city low speed runs, but they are garbage for anything else.
You're also not allowed to use them on steering tires, or school buses.
That should tell you something about their reliability.
+kleetus92 yes you will see some tread that has separated from the carcass, that type the tread is glued on. You will see some failures but their are FAR more tires out there NOT failing..This video shows a "REMOLDING" type of recap.. They dont separate like the Glue on treads do..
+Raven4122 Wasn't aware they have 2 different types of recaps, never heard of the glue on tires. Are the remolded tires approved for use on steering tires or school buses?
in some states check the state laws, I was on interstate today saw seveal glue on recappa on the road!
These tires should be illegal.
How so?
Karl P.
Was in a car years doing 70mph on the motorway and it going bang, the entire outta tread had came off the centre part it was glued to.
bob hope also, they're not glued, get your facts straight.
bob hope Generally, consumer grade tires used on passenger vehicles are not re-worked like this. This process is reserved for larger truck and construction vehicle shoes that cost thousands to replace and can contribute greatly to the overall overall operating expense of said vehicle.
You basically should never use re-worked passenger tires.
Also, your situation sounds like you had a catastrophic failure of the tire core. Probably bad manufacturing.
bob hope that's probably the reason I see a lot of tires on the freeway from large trucks, they probably use those tires to save money, but they are just more dangerous to the public!!! should be illegal, I few times I saw those tires exploding
Had 2 remoulds on an Audi 20 years ago.Went round an island and both treads left the tyre.These are death traps.
Ouch. I wouldn't dare put remoulds on my Audi. I know they say that tires don't matter, but they really do! I wouldn't put anything but Pirelli from the P series on mine. Those things last years with constant highway usage!
who says tires dosent matter? This should only be used for slow heavy machnery only a greedy idiot would use remoulded on a car lol
Just average people. I wasn't saying it as a whole. I've had tons of people, even mechanics tell me tires don't matter which is the biggest lie I've ever heard.
You got scammed. Retreads done like this are most certainly safe... The remolds on your vehicle were definitely not done properly.
Back then things were different.Still drove home about a couple of miles as the tyres didn't deflate.Paid £7.00 each back then.What a cheapskate i was.
Good work here
Of course they are safe as brand new tires
But as well they are more good for environmental issues
Might as well just paint them with sharpies and wrap them with duct tape.
Lol
lol LOL
I ran duct taped tyres once on my bicycle when i was a kid, though, since the duct tape makes the tyre 'slick' it would go faster like Formula 1 slick tyres do....
Debbiebabe69 yeah that's a no. The reason slicks are better for traction is because they are made of a very soft compound, and they have no tread, making a much larger contact patch on the ground. They have no direct impact on speed(besides traction). And no. Your duct tape slicks do nothing apart from making you look poor.
i had a tire with a hole and i used a piece of an old innertube and duct tape to cover the hole, worked for a while.
so that's the stuff i see at the side of the road
You never know what might come in handy, knowing more is never a bad thing!
you can use them on trailer tires quite well, you just need to have a little bit extra tyre pressure since it doesn't flex as much
Am I the only one who feels like eating that tire? XD
+philip s (Dishano) it looks wet and delicous
щ
are you the alien from district 9?
+philip s (Dishano) it seems delicious i say
I was trying to figure out how i can have sex with it.
30 - 60% less reliable too
+TheGentleman those are the tires that use to explode and hit your front bumper! I've been hit once, not nice!
Years ago, i used to see the retread skins all over highways. I have not seen one in Years, so the skin must adhere better. Come to think of it, i do not see mufflers, or roadster roof tops on the side of the roads anymore either.
+David James because they got prisoners picking that shit up. But really the roads have gotten cleaner
+David James In 1 year I've went through 7 re-treads because they blew apart, mind you my unit has 8 axles and 30 tires... so maybe that's not to bad.
But you dont see caps all over the highway any more because they're usually run over a multitude of times and fly off the road.
+Felipe Luiz Dickmann wrong you are thing of a recap not a remold
30 to 60% less reliable too but if the cost is more important than your life then up to the individual
but brand new chinese tires are 80% cheaper =P
But they wear out 80 percent faster.
Junn Kit Wong and 80% shorter life span
Who cares :P. When they wear out buy another. It costs 5 times as much to buy a "good brand" one. Just more frequent changes though
restoring old tires sounds like a brilliant idea from both cost and environmental aspects
+TheAndrey Hey that's great. Put them on your car then.
8 million views. And like a bored sucker I joined in too.
If you dont like retread tires, dont whine about it on youtube, shut up and buy new ones. ive run retreads for years woth no problems at all, re-CAPS are the scary ones.
used for what?on a truck or a car?
Bull fuckin shit, Don't ever buy used tires, they explode (come apart) at high speeds!
Thirty to sixty percent cheaper than a new tire, and 300 to 600% more dangerous and polluting.
+Monel Funkawitz you have any peer reviewed sources to back your claim?
they recycled those tires not polluting it.
+Wildman of the Wynooch drive down any highway. I counted 392 casings by the side of the road on the way to the airport. I've seen recaps come apart and cause a wreck. (truck hooked hard left, went off road, cab and trailer flipped sideways) friend of mine had a recap take out her windshield. (not through but destroyed the windshield)
@ Monel Funkawitz Not say Remolds are better. Just a little known truth most the of the tire or gator tails are from factory tires not properly inflated or having too much wight on them. That's from the NHSI
If you fly you landed on retreads, standard industry practice.
I'd never buy such garbage! I'm not trusting old patched up tires.
I get new, premium ones every time.
They might cost more, but new tires are worth every penny!
+megadriver6
I would only buy these to do burn outs with in my car(yes they also make these for some cars)
They are cheap and I dont care if they blow during the burn out
IIGrayfoxII
There is an idea XD
I paid 500 doller for new tires,i replaced every tires,yes its expensive but hey there are peoples driving on the road,im feel more safe with new tires.......
Looks good but is it any better then retreads from 20 to 30 years ago. It would be nice to be able to reuse tires over and over again. Save on all the land fills overflowing with tires that are an eyesore. I still see lots of retreads on the highways that have come off of these big trucks. Nice video. Thanks for sharing.
looks dodgy as fuck
Seems like more work than making new tires...
Mmmmm.....liquorice......
irelandbloke lol
Reminds me of liquorice when it comes out of the mould. YUM ! :)
Well I'm two tired to watch this... I'm miles from the end of this video
I can't understand this on road cars but I can heavy machinery where you spend 1000 + on each tire and do a low speed.
3:09am, you already know.
5:11
It's scary that this is the exact time I'm seeing this comment lol
5:44
we have had new tires blow also, retreads are getting very good now, but for long haul new high end tires is the best option:)
These tires are unsafe and always fall apart or they have Blow outs
that is not true.
BullrockMcHammergeil yes, it's true. and sometimes the pieces on the road get accidents to cars on the road, and no way to know about the responsible of this mess. So it's good to be illegal - it's unsafe. =/
Marc Antunes It's not illegal in Germany. But everyone knows we have the world's best engineers and manufacturers, so our stuff is safe.
As example: Opel is also German and it's not even near the other car's brand quality.
here, also, it's all a question on money traded by some quality.
Theses tires falls apart on the high way (and very dangerous), and it's well known to any car driver.
Marc Antunes Yeah but Opels are Vauxhalls.
How many times have you seen these new rubber treads come clean off a forty foot trucks tyre and cause a hazard? Junk
Yes, back in 1986. I have not seen one in so long, i forgot about it
David James oh did you loose your sight ? The roads of certain European countries are littered with them
How many have you actually PERSONALLY examined? Because unless and until you do, YOU HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA IF THE FAILED TIRE IS A RETREAD! (If there are steel wires in the cap, it isn't.)
A lot less than i used to see 20 or 30 years ago. I can only conclude the technology / polymers/resins and quality checks have improved. Roads used to be littered with these hazards. Ni drive us95 in the northeast and southeast, and i do not recall seeing any in years? Better road cleanup? Mayb, but i doubt it.
TrueBlueEG8 i am in the USA. I wonder why Europe still has problems with them? Mufflers, hubcaps, and retreads are not on the sides of roads anymore.
Why am i watching this?
This is old, they dont do it like that anymore.
If you want really safe use brand new quality tires, using remolded tires increasing your life into risk. some cases using brand new turns faulty due to factory defective much more if you used remolded. But in this video only shows how it's made remolded tires to inform people what quality they do it. Here in the Philippines their using a free casted molded rubber and attach into cleaned old tire with adhesive rubber glue. I think much more quality I saw on this video than what they do in my Country, wishing they should watch this video to enhance their skills.
Note to self: don't buy tyres in the Philippines...
Remoulded tyres are crap at best, but adhesive rubber glue!?
A major *WTF* moment.
Hi Laurel Mungcal, I'm Tuan from Vietnam, I would like to build an old tire recycling line, you can share experiences and equipment in Philippine.
could you share the information via my phone number 84904222568, and my mail tuannguyenta81@gmail.com
Thanks
If you look at the treads you will see they are off road tires. Not for highway use. Most likely construction vehicles, or forestry vehicles, etc. People in the construction industry do this to save money and the equipment they use the tires on rarely hit speeds of more than 25kph. So blow outs aren't an issue like they are with higher speeds and on the highway.
I have been reading the arguments on the practicality of retreaded tires and as a technician who worked for a short time in the industry I agree with views on both sides! However there are different methods and technologies in this industry. I believe this was a "Bandag" or Goodyears "Wingfoot" type retread. I worked at TCI tire in south Nashville which used Michelin technology. Michelin has a similar approach with exception of using x-ray to inspect casings and the tread is reapplied in a single rubber strip that is applied after the carcass has been skived filled and patched. Then the tire is placed in a sleeve that applies pressure from the inside of the tire pushing out and the tread covering applies pressure to force adhesion while it is placed in a vacuum chamber with i believe as many as 60 plus tires to cure at 450 degrees for an hour. Here are some factors that play in part of the safe use of retreaded tires season- retreads and any tire can and will fail with the combination of low pressure and high temps! Use- Majority of retreads never see highway but used in off road conditions where tire longevity and expense is an issue with road or trail conditions. Retreads are allowed on rear tractor axles and trailer axles and never on steers! Retreads are only as good as the casing they are built on! Casing junk? Retread will fail! So are these tires junk? No they have their purpose! One is recycling! Reuse is the best way. I will invite anyone to go by a retread car or truck tire and be amazed at their longevity. Its all opinion and experience. For those that base their opinion solely on this video< I encourage them to volunteer to pick up some blown carcasses or "Gators" of the highways.
See those tires laying on the side of the road, 98% of them are remolded. My boss bought three remolded tires and placed them on my truck, lost all three in a week, heat wave was a factor , worst part was losing one during hill descent with close to 40ton load.
Coming soon to a lane near you, its the new "Blowout!" Available in 3 tread types.
I kept my mountain bike tyres at too high a pressure and now the sidewall has started to split and the inner tube bulged out and exploded. (I lack street credibility) So basically I'm an idiot which has resulted in me leading an idiotic life. Needless to say, women are not the slightest bit interested in me except for meaningless sex. So, in conclusion, I love being an idiot!
+John von Horn It happened at work and by boss thought we were under attack from terrorists and ran for cover shouting, "shots fired, shots fired, man down!"
If I worked for Trump he'd call me into the boardroom and say, "I don't want to deal with an idiot, you're fired"
What the heck are y ou talking about
What kind of software is used for the robot voice over?
The process is called vulcanization not polymerization and its kindly scar that rubber is applied to spots with bare steel wire. The rubber around steel wires is formulated to adhere to brass plated steel. This movie is scary
That's the garbage to us in Russia comes from China, a lot of accidents. Has saved $ 300 - gave his life.
I did this myself several years ago, but it was a lot more "archaic" in the cap shop where I worked, First of all we only did each step once, the inspection, buffing, skiving, gluing, capping, and then cooking.
Second, we actually didn't do any of the steps with the sides of the tire, only treads, and during the gluing phase it wasn't small strips, it was that big strip you see used on the sides here.
Third, We actually used huge pressure cooking ovens, instead of what the video shows.
help! I'm lost in the internet and I ended up here!
3:30-> "The mold applies 100kg of pressure.." kg isn't a unit of pressure :P
Looks real safe ;"D
проще новое колесо купить!
Never seen this done before Fantastic Work. Remember all the food you eat arrives at stores on Trucks running many of these rebuilt tires .
why he drilled.. someone can say? Hole in the wheel is now safely?
why you type... you can say? English for understand is internet now?
you understanf ukrainian languadge?...
Кас Буглак Nein. buf i underhdsah fahajkcllk sajlkakx oiroi! AOfkoao :D ckorioa? kofucui9e9awi9! AJS9oau uou39aoe u9oaudao9u
ClonesDream
Please go back to your games, moron.
Drilled to remove a rust spot which would spread and destroy the belts from the inside
Re treads should be illegal! when you see pieces of tire on the highway 90% of the time those are retreads... so dangerous!
The cheap will be expensive
This should be illegal . I wonder how many highway drivers lost their lives from tired treads flying off.
and then you add the shleem
the shleem is then re purposed for later batches
Just what I was thinking. A quick google search suggests over £200 per tyre (re-moulded), so assuming the refurbishing process takes about 2 hours per tyre, they could be making huge profits, especially if they get the tyres free in the first place.
Furthermore, they may be provided with bursaries for this kind of thing, seeing as reinforced tyres can't be easity recycled.
As an ASE master technician, I plead to anyone that is viewing this:
Please, I BEG YOU, please! tell everyone you know about the dangers of retreaded tires. SAY NO TO RETREADS!!!
kingoftaurus Obviously not the best thing, but they've been using re-treads for years... there's also a reason they're illegal to have on the front wheels...
This looks to me like to drink a beer and then bottle your piss to sell it for the half of the price of a new beer... :D
DO NOT BUY REMOLDED TIRES! the glue can melt while driving and you will not have a wheel attacked to your car anymore
What glue?
Attacked to the car? Don't you mean "attached" to the car?
yes, thank you mike lol :L
there is on car tires
Neel J
who the hell buys re-molded car tires? they are already cheap as dirt when compared to truck tires, the process is probably more expensive.
the are unsafe both for user and for other people that might get a piece of it over the road and get an accident!
That casing had broken cords in it. That means it was defective. That means it should have been discarded, not retreaded.
Ziah Jolléy WHAT video did you watch?
@ 1:50 to 2:20 that is clearly broken cords and a HOLE that goes clear through the casing, requiring a patch to be applied to the inside of the casing, so the (POS) casing has some chance of holding some air.
"slightly damaging the steel ply " is that how you refer to a section of completely severed steel cords ?
I have a lot of really good "slightly damaged" stuff that I would like to sell to you !!!
Ziah Jolléy Yah, I watched the video. AND I saw the part where they run a carbide burr clear through the tire casing in the tread section. It is NOT a tight fit as the burr is plunged into the hole and they start wallowing the hole out even bigger to clean things up. Broken cord is visible. What video did you watch?
Funny thing. They put that steel cord in the tire for a reason, and the reason is because it is needed to handled the heavy loads of heavy trucks. Otherwise they could just make tires out of used chewing gum. When the cord is broken, it can no longer lend any strength to the tire. Support is why the tire employs steel cords in its construction to beef it up, If steel cords were not need they would not be in there, and the tire could just use aggregate mineral fill for its construction. But they do not do that, and the reason is because it would not work very well, just like this tire is a gamble that is not going to hold up when its expose to higher demands of it operation conditions. That is why a tire like that should be thrown away, and hopefully it was never installed on the front of a truck because its just a ticking clock for a blow out.
Companies probably already resell these as new ones at the same cost, don't they?
Guys, it's illegal to run re-treads on front.. it's flat out dangerous at that point. However well they maybe less reliable, re-treads have been around for awhile, and relatively safe on the rear tires and dual.
That's whey there are retread caps all over the freeway in summer...
F Huber you realize not all of those are retread caps right? An original tire can lose its tread in the same way.
These are flat out dangerous anyway. Ive had them destroy my car on the freeway. I couldn't imagine what it would do to a motorcyclist.
UPS is running recaps for steer tires on there trucks...why? Keep cost down. Remember when you never saw a dirty UPS truck? Now it's all the time. It's always about the $$$$ forget safety
Mark Running recaps on the steer tires is not DOT legal. Where did you come up with that info? No trucks in the US run recaps on the steers. With the amount of random highway patrol stops on trucks no one would get away with that.
These tires are fine stop complaining and makin up myths...
То чувство когда толком не знаешь английский и всё равно всё понятно.
Союз нерушимый республик свободных. Сплотила навеки Великая Русь. Да здравствует созданный волей народов.
people who say these arent safe have no clue the 160 degree heat and compression will totally mend the rubber together like new and a small gap in the wires under the tread does not weaken them at all you could have 8+ puncture repairs in a tyre and it would still be fine
All that effort for a death trap tyre
originally made in China used in USA remolded in china and resold in the usa lol
Remolded tires are very dangerous for alls vehicles!
Schlummer77 really
The polymerization isn't reliable, especially in low end shops. The strip will sometimes completely come off destroying the tire which would potentially cause the driver to lose control. That's why you see so many strips of tires on the road.
That's why it's illegal to use remold tyres as steering tyres.
Properly remold tyres are quite safe as load-bearing non-steering tyres.
The keyword, of course, is "properly". Too many recap/remold shops cut corners too much.
What's a "tyre"?
He gives a good description of the proper use of remolded tires and you're trying to bust his balls over the spelling his country uses for tire.
most dangerous tyres to buy.
Are these what end up on the road from semi trucks? Everyone I know has had damage from these road debris. Should tack on stiff extra taxes for businesses like these.
I hate recaps. damm things blowout so much more often than virgin rubber. they leave huge long strips in the road too
vay amk bizde kabak diye çöpe atıp dünya para sıfırını alalım.
Note to people, do not run reteads on a pickup or car, but on a drive tire of a semi it a a perfectly safe and cost effective method.
10 million views?! O:O
It is 60 more likely to have a blow out and almost guaranteed to loose the its tread all over the highway. They dont recommend driving them in highway. You saved about $80 and then it blows out on the highway 8k miles later costing you a $300 service call assuming it was during the day. What a smart investment
$300 service call, possibly millions if you cripple or kill other people. Your life it too precious to skimp on tires. After all, they're the only things touching the road.
Those are the same tires that fly apart on the Thruway and smash through your windshield. Been there! If you travel on a long trip, look along the side of the road. All those black chunks are recapped tire shrapnel. You will see miles of them.
Recapped are not the same as remolds.
Have to say this looks far better than normal retreaded truck tyres but I might be wrong. Nice to see they are recycling tyres just hope they are safe.
Sounds like it was narrated by Dr DuuH
A lot of people are commenting that this is dangerous but from what I understand most airlines use re-moulded tyres so presumably it must be safe because aircraft take off and land much faster than road vehicles and we don't hear of incidents with tyre blowouts.
Far as i know airliners uses new tires...
Khaee Nearly 100 percent of the world’s airlines use retreaded tires. 80 percent of the tires used by the commercial aviation industry
are retreaded.
www.goodyear.eu/ro_ro/images/Next%20Tread%20Tyre%20Line%20Up.pdf
A majority of aviation tires are retreads. As long as the carcass (core, cords, bead, and sidewalls) are still good then it's safe.
Remold is much safer than recap.
You are correct; you can't use retreads on the very front wheels.
The are also forbidden ANYWHERE on school buses and on trucks that haul gasoline.
excellent video. explains from scratch. thanks a lot
they are perfectly safe, i use these daily. These are remolded, not rethreaded. big difference. Also they last way longer than a brand new chinese tire
+Samuel Duval i drive with tires that had bulges on no big of a deal at 40 mph
Now i know how Nankang is made xD
30-60% more chance blowing up on the road
+andrei artishuk So, you must have actual FACTS to back that up...right?
+John Ferguson sounds like bs