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Tire Marking ideas needed

Mr.N

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Is that a way to permanently mark vehicle tires?
- or something that will last longer than a wax crayon.

I keep looking at my metal stamps and torch.
 
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RazrRebel

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We have a brand at work with interchangeable letters for branding OTR tires with serial numbers. I would think as long as you don't get carried away with the heat youl'd be allright.
 

scottybaccus

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Davilla, Tx
The tires already have a unique serial number molded into the sidewall. Can't you use it?

Look for the DOT number followed by a unique sequence.
 

kbs2244

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If you look into the wood working magazines you can buy electric branding irons.
The guys use them to mark their creations.
 

mpire

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I know this is a stupid question, but why are you branding the tires?
 

Even Steven

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Is that a way to permanently mark vehicle tires?
- or something that will last longer than a wax crayon.

I keep looking at my metal stamps and torch.

Well, since you said "or something that will last longer than a wax crayon", I'll tell you that I've used Sharpie markers on tires (the silver ones) and that stuff stays on FOR A LOOOOOONG time.

Favorite_Sharpie.jpg
 

porphyre

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If that's all you're doing, you don't need the marks to last. When you pull them off in the spring, mark them with chalk (piece of drywall works fine) with the corner it's coming from... RF, LF, RR, LR... Then next fall, look at the marks and put them on the car accordingly.

The hardest part is remembering if the marks are for the corner the tire came FROM or where it's supposed to go TO! :lol_hitti
 
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BigAl62

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suburbs of Chicago
I used tire paint sticks (like for touching up whitewalls or raised white letters). You should be able to find them at an auto parts store. These look like tire crayons, but are actually solid paint sticks. O'Reilly's lists them on their website.
 
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Mr.N

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I know this is a stupid question, but why are you branding the tires?
I'm assuming since he does four wheeling and that he has large expensive tires, he wants to brand them in case they ever get stolen.
We have a winner!


The tires already have a unique serial number molded into the sidewall. Can't you use it?

Look for the DOT number followed by a unique sequence.
The last 4 numbers are a date code. It's not a unique number per tire.


Well, since you said "or something that will last longer than a wax crayon", I'll tell you that I've used Sharpie markers on tires (the silver ones) and that stuff stays on FOR A LOOOOOONG time.
I'll give that a try and also hit the inside with it!
We have a brand at work with interchangeable letters for branding OTR tires with serial numbers. I would think as long as you don't get carried away with the heat youl'd be allright.
Brand them. The 24.5's on my Freightliner even have a spot on the sidewall, an open box, marked "brand here".
Go to any truck tire sales/repair place. They can probly do it for you.
Thank you both, very good to know. My sidewalls are extra thick, so I don't think a little brand will do much.
tire crayons dont wear off that quick....and if you brand them, what about the following season? theres a 75% chance that tire wont be in the same position depending on your tires and your rotation habits.

Tire crayons are not the same kind your kids play with.
https://www.google.com/#q=tire+cray....,cf.osb&fp=cc4e61ecb303b1a9&biw=1680&bih=900
Thanks for the link.
I've just not see them last too long on a rock crawler / trail ride.
I rub my tires against rocks, logs, mud and more. In the winter I will run 3-4 psi and the tire can fold over it self on turns.
 
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wssix99

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Chicago, IL
You can use rubber boat paint. It works pretty well and is durable enough for the underside of a boat, but it will come off with solvents. (So its not as durable as branding.)

I some yellow rubber boat paint to make yellow side walls on some tires. It worked great, but in my application, it was really difficult to make a straight line and I abandoned the job because I didn't have the patience to do it correctly. :)
 

srmofo

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The dot number IS a unique number. The last 4 just also happen to be the date of manufacture...but you would need proof of purchase of those dot numbers. Since the dot numbers are exposed, someone could claim you just took the numbers right off the sidewall.

Branding sounds like the right choice here.
 
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Mr.N

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I've a silver Sharpy, a paint pen and air out of the tires for branding with the steel....
 

Even Steven

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The dot number IS a unique number. The last 4 just also happen to be the date of manufacture...but you would need proof of purchase of those dot numbers. Since the dot numbers are exposed, someone could claim you just took the numbers right off the sidewall.

Actually, the DOT number isn't unique. All five of my tires (I have a fullsize spare) have the same exact DOT number. If the number was unique, no two tires would have the same number.
 
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Mr.N

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Well, today I gave it a shot!

Started out marking with the paint pen and silver sharpie.

IMG_5769.JPG


Then move up to the branding.
First and foremost I had the tires off the rims, thus no air in the tires.
Getting the heat right was hard, I kept thinking of a hot knife through butter.

IMG_5768.JPG

Below is the first attempt, after that I applied more heat to the metal and got more penetration in the tire. I could see someone going too deep and causing damage.

Now, if you look to the left of the 952, it my lesson learned on keeping the clamp tight. I slipped and the clamp gave out.
I also took advanatage of having the tires off the rims and marked other places ...
For the bonus question, name this rim!

IMG_5770.JPG
 
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