During the 5.5 million/52 years miles I have driven big trucks I have experienced many tire failures. Nearly everyone can be attributed to low air pressure or overloading...with a couple exceptions.
During the late 70's I was hauling swinging meat for an outfit out of Milwaukee. Great company, good fast trucks and a good fleet manager.
But during the Carter administrations hyper inflation era he got a little cheap with the tires on our regional operating trucks.
I was driving a year old White and pulled into our yard one day and got corralled by the shop foreman..." We have ten new tires to install on your truck"... Ok.
Seems the mgr. got a deal on some ancient, obsolete General rib trailer tires and he had enough to re-tire three trucks.
During the next couple months I blew 7 tires...two steers in one day! THAT experiment got cancelled early. The other trucks lost at least five each.
During the 20+ years I owned my own equipment I found the cheapest tire to own was the most expensive to buy....Michelin. I was always easy on the throttle from a start and got an unbelievable 800,000 miles on one set of drives on my last Pete.
But I screwed up, too. My last two outfits saw me hauling potatoes out of Wisconsin and also following the tater harvest starting in Florida in January then into Georgia, Missouri by May then back home in August.
I got paid by the ton...I ran heavy on every load. Wisconsin allowed us 90K on five axles for the harvest but I'd be 100k loaded with seed potatoes headed south in March .
I made good $$$ until the dispatcher got axed and his replacement never kept me loaded both ways. So my income dropped 40%.
Tires were the first casualty of my impending brush with poverty.
I always had great luck with retreads done by Michelin...even in sketchy Goodyear casings I got 500,000 miles on drive tires.
But not on my stock of 8-10 year old Joke-a-hamas, BF Goodblimp and other lesser brands that I had stored in my shop.
Some of those seed tater trips saw me blow two trailer tires in a 1700 mile round trip. I was forced to buy replacements on the road from the truck stops that sell crappy, off brand retreads or overpriced new tires.
No issues with those old tires if I was running light but heavy loads killed them.
My daily has six year old Uni-Royals in the back...new in January ones in front.
My Coronet is getting the front takeoffs from the Buick. .
Regarding cracks in the rubber...the DOT allows some cracking on truck tires within reason.
Buy a GOOD tire from a major label, keep them inflated near the max. recommended pressure and don't overload them and they will last many years.
If you can afford Michelin buy them.
If you are poor like me stay away from Won Hung Lo mfd. tires ... China has great food but crappy tires .
May the beatings begin.
Kinda depends on how much you value your car & the people who ride in it.... In the case of the Challenger in the video posted above we slowed from 75 to 55 and drove about another 8-10 miles hoping to nurse the car home... It was getting worse.... It rode home on a tow truck.... And now has new tires... Mickey Thompsons this time....
This isn't the first time I've seen a separation, back in the 70's & 80's Firestone was well known for them... But something in tires has changed & they are failing a lot more than they did twenty years ago
What happened was China, Yugoslavia, Vietnam made tires.