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S.E. Iowa | Have seen this happen before and the cause was not the tire fault. Have seen alum rims that wear with age and get sharp and cut the bead at the same spot as yours did. Not saying this is your problem, but a customer went though 3 sets of tires on a pickup. heavy loads, low inflation? , maybe the squirm of a radial over a bias belt. anyway they ended up looking much like yours. Switched from alum rims to steeel wheels and the problem ended. Just saying that when you change your tires, check the bead area carefully could be contributing to some of your problems. | |
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