Wolf.Dose
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You do not have this marking in the states due to the speed limits. However, if you have European tires, speed is give by the speed index according ETRTO. F equals 80 km/h, G equals 90 km/h, J equals 100 km/h, K equals 110 km/h. Higher speed indices for trucks are NOT available for Off Road tires. The next is the Load index.
Modern 14.00-20 usually have 160F or 164F or G wich means they are legal for 9 metric tons axle load (160) or 9.5 metric tons (164). I you reduce the load by for example 10% you may extend the maximun speed at the pressure for the maximum load by 2%. More than 5 % speed extention is not legal, even with a load reduction of 30%. If you do not care for this, you are fully responable for what you do. No insurance will cover that risk.
Brake performance: Even military trucks were made at least to the minimum brake requirements of the time of their manufacture. And DOT does not test them, the manufacturer states the confirmation with the requirements. That is the system in the states.
And think about the following: After modifications in case of an accident the attorny-general will not ask for requirements of the late 40's, they refer to the actual requirements.
I'm able to recalculate brake systems, for I studied that. I would not take the risk to change 9.00-20 to 14.00-20 without propper brake modification. Pedal force is not all. And the trucks are not really on the safe side for nowadays understanding. They have a single circuit system only!
Wolf
Modern 14.00-20 usually have 160F or 164F or G wich means they are legal for 9 metric tons axle load (160) or 9.5 metric tons (164). I you reduce the load by for example 10% you may extend the maximun speed at the pressure for the maximum load by 2%. More than 5 % speed extention is not legal, even with a load reduction of 30%. If you do not care for this, you are fully responable for what you do. No insurance will cover that risk.
Brake performance: Even military trucks were made at least to the minimum brake requirements of the time of their manufacture. And DOT does not test them, the manufacturer states the confirmation with the requirements. That is the system in the states.
And think about the following: After modifications in case of an accident the attorny-general will not ask for requirements of the late 40's, they refer to the actual requirements.
I'm able to recalculate brake systems, for I studied that. I would not take the risk to change 9.00-20 to 14.00-20 without propper brake modification. Pedal force is not all. And the trucks are not really on the safe side for nowadays understanding. They have a single circuit system only!
Wolf