When we purchased our R182 in late 2020 it came with a set of brand new Good Year Flight Custom III tires. After 300hrs of service we noticed the right MLG tire had noticeably more wear on the outer area of the tread than the inner area, so we recently flipped the tire on the rim. See pics below - pic2 shows wear variance from outer to inner tread areas. We're hoping for another 300hrs of service on these tires which seems possible given the thickness of rubber remaining on the now outer area of the tread. We also like the wide/flat tread footprint on the relatively small 15x 6.0-6 main tire that helps distribute weight when on soft areas like grass runways.
What brand of tires are you using? Are you pleased with their performance? Post pics of their wear performance on this thread.
Note: We struggled breaking the tire bead from the wheel possibly due to the high pressure(68psi) recommended for the main tires. Is there a secret method for breaking the bead? Please share.
What Brand of tires are you flying? How are they wearing? Here's what 300hrs on Good Year Flight Custom IIIs looks like
- scottrsellers
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue Jun 11, 2024 1:53 pm
- Aircraft Type: R182
- Has thanked: 11 times
- Been thanked: 8 times
What Brand of tires are you flying? How are they wearing? Here's what 300hrs on Good Year Flight Custom IIIs looks like
Scott Sellers
1978 R182/300XP/RSTOL
1978 R182/300XP/RSTOL
- scottrsellers
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue Jun 11, 2024 1:53 pm
- Aircraft Type: R182
- Has thanked: 11 times
- Been thanked: 8 times
Re: What Brand of tires are you flying? How are they wearing? Here's what 300hrs on Good Year Flight Custom IIIs looks
While considering tires for his R182 recently Mike Pattison compared Condor tires to Good Year Flight Custom III’s by putting each on a scale.
No surprise the GYFC3s were almost 2 lbs heavier, showing the difference in thickness of tread rubber and justifying their additional cost.
Checkout photos here:
No surprise the GYFC3s were almost 2 lbs heavier, showing the difference in thickness of tread rubber and justifying their additional cost.
Checkout photos here:
Scott Sellers
1978 R182/300XP/RSTOL
1978 R182/300XP/RSTOL
-
chaseduncan98
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Sun Jul 28, 2024 6:24 pm
- Location: KOPN
- Aircraft Type: None
Re: What Brand of tires are you flying? How are they wearing? Here's what 300hrs on Good Year Flight Custom IIIs looks
You need to have your gear aligned. The airplane was aligned from the factory to be perfect at gross weight. If you normally fly it light then you need to have it realigned at what weight you normally fly. If you resently replaced your gear down stop pads this could also cause this. Either way after you realign the gear you wont have this issue anymore.scottrsellers wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 3:15 am When we purchased our R182 in late 2020 it came with a set of brand new Good Year Flight Custom III tires. After 300hrs of service we noticed the right MLG tire had noticeably more wear on the outer area of the tread than the inner area, so we recently flipped the tire on the rim. See pics below - pic2 shows wear variance from outer to inner tread areas. We're hoping for another 300hrs of service on these tires which seems possible given the thickness of rubber remaining on the now outer area of the tread. We also like the wide/flat tread footprint on the relatively small 15x 6.0-6 main tire that helps distribute weight when on soft areas like grass runways.
What brand of tires are you using? Are you pleased with their performance? Post pics of their wear performance on this thread.
Note: We struggled breaking the tire bead from the wheel possibly due to the high pressure(68psi) recommended for the main tires. Is there a secret method for breaking the bead? Please share.
pic1.jpg
pic2.jpg
pic3.jpg
pic4.jpg
- scottrsellers
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue Jun 11, 2024 1:53 pm
- Aircraft Type: R182
- Has thanked: 11 times
- Been thanked: 8 times
Re: What Brand of tires are you flying? How are they wearing? Here's what 300hrs on Good Year Flight Custom IIIs looks
Agreed Chase! Thanks for the feedback.
Section 5 of the Service Manual, paragraph 5-51, p.5-44 to p.5-47 covers rigging and alignment of the main landing gear.
We'll follow those procedures that will hopefully address the uneven tire wear issue.
Section 5 of the Service Manual, paragraph 5-51, p.5-44 to p.5-47 covers rigging and alignment of the main landing gear.
We'll follow those procedures that will hopefully address the uneven tire wear issue.
Scott Sellers
1978 R182/300XP/RSTOL
1978 R182/300XP/RSTOL
-
dcat9812
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Fri Jun 28, 2024 8:02 pm
- Aircraft Type: R182
- Has thanked: 8 times
- Been thanked: 3 times
Re: What Brand of tires are you flying? How are they wearing? Here's what 300hrs on Good Year Flight Custom IIIs looks
I’m in need of new tires for my R182. I’m debating on going with the Flight Customs vs Condors. Does the gear system benefit from a lighter tire (Condors)? I have Flight Customs on another airplane and I love them, but it’s also fixed gear. I currently have Air Tracs which were on the airplane when I purchased it…going with Flight Customs or Condors are a big upgrade either way!
One more piece of data…the Condors are almost $100 per tire cheaper if purchased from McFarland with our type club discount vs Flight customs from Aircraft spruce.
Thoughts?
One more piece of data…the Condors are almost $100 per tire cheaper if purchased from McFarland with our type club discount vs Flight customs from Aircraft spruce.
Thoughts?
---
Matt Van Bergen
Cessna R182 Owner / N62JM
Matt Van Bergen
Cessna R182 Owner / N62JM