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Don't want to start an argument - but a Bandag Recap on a Michelin Carcass will outlast the original Michelin and most other tires. Of course like everything else there are retread facilities that do a first class job. And there are others who will make you swear off recaps forever.Why would you think Dot forbids the use of retreads on busses? Because they carry people not logs. Retreads do not last as long as new tires. Anyone who runs them on the steers is rolling the dice with their own life and the lives of others sharing the road. The loggers you've been talking to need their heads examined.
My first car was a 1967 Camero. It was very used. Maybe heavily abused is a better description. There wasn't one square foot on it that didn't have a dent on it. I found a body shop that fixed for me. I wasn't smart enough to know "Bondo" wasn't very stable - but at 16 - it looked pretty dang fine to me. The reason I bring all that up is that I needed tires. SIXTY BUCKS got me four brand new recaps mounted, balanced and on the car. Driving home from the tire store, the left rear had a piece of the recap started beating the side of the car. A piece about eight inches long and two inches wide "let go". Not completely. Just enough to beat the Bondo out of the left rear fender.
I have never run retreads on anything that I have owned since then. Imagine how much worse it might have been on a front tire...
As I mentioned earlier, a Bandag Recap on a Michelin carcass IS what we used on small tire lowboy trailers for one company that I worked for with OUTSTANDING performance. They wore like iron and blowouts simply stopped happening. We hauled a lot of M4's with derricks mounted on them on those "very low to the ground" trailers. Those trailers had eight retreads and I finally was able to stop repairing air lines and trailer wiring that happened every time a tire exploded.