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Tire Recommendations


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I'm going to be needing new tires for the mains in the near future and was wondering what brand would be best.  I see McCreary offers the Air Hawk tire for about $75 thtough aircraft Spruce but on the upper end you have the Michelin Air Tire for $198 a tire.  I don't have a problem getting the nicer tires if they're worth the money, but are they?


I fly in SoCal so I'll likely be landing on mostly dry runways.


I'd like to hear what other people are buying and why.

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Something to think about 


Anytime I change tires on a retract I ALWAYS do a quick retract test and check clearance, only takes a few exta minutes and it's on jacks anyway. I know a guy that did not do this years ago, he installed one new main retread took off landed gear up,  the darn tire got stuck in the well. 


 

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  • 5 months later...

Its the retreads you have to worry about on the clearance issue both for the mains and front. If I were going to run them I would check the clearance after installation. I run Condors and have about 6 years on them. No visible cracking tread is still good. Airplane is hangared.

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Just put a set of Desser Elites on the '80 J. 600.6 6-ply on the mains and 500.5 6-ply on the nose. To be sure, we retracted them before returning the plane to service and had no problem. If I recall, someone once had problems retracting the "monster" retread but not these. The tread depth is excellent, and the workmanship on the tire looks good.

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I have about 400hrs on a set of Desser Elites (same sizes) on my 66E, and they're still going strong. Great tire for the money.

Just put a set of Desser Elites on the '80 J. 600.6 6-ply on the mains and 500.5 6-ply on the nose. To be sure, we retracted them before returning the plane to service and had no problem. If I recall, someone once had problems retracting the "monster" retread but not these. The tread depth is excellent, and the workmanship on the tire looks good.

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Condor nose tire, Flight Custom IIs for the mains.

It seems the difference between II and III is mostly the ground speed rating. IIs are good up to 120 mph which is Vge, and IIIs will handle 160-170 mph. Can Mooney tires have a controlled touchdown above 120?

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It seems the difference between II and III is mostly the ground speed rating. IIs are good up to 120 mph which is Vge, and IIIs will handle 160-170 mph. Can Mooney tires have a controlled touchdown above 120?

Speed rating really has nothing to do with it. The advantage of the Flight Custom III is the increased tread depth. Tire longevity is mostly the result of tread depth. This was born out by Aviation Consumers simulated landings and skid testing where these tires won due to their increased tread depth. I can't find the reference, (it could be in the original aviation consumer article) but I recall the III's where developed in response to flight schools and tested by Embry Riddle whom claimed 40% more landings from previous tires. Goodyear advertises a more conservative 20% more landings.

With regards to tubes, a buytl tube is what is desired to reduce leakage. These are marketed by several manufacturers under different names but all perform the same; i.e. Leakguard, Airstop etc.

I am on my second set of FC III's after getting over 800 hours on the first set with lots of landings.

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