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Friday, July 3, 2026
What are sidewall Bulges, Bumps or Depressions?
This question about a tire sidewall bump was originally posted by an RV Travel
reader: We had a new-to-us travel trailer. When we stopped for gas, the station
attendant had this horrified look on his face and showed us bulges on 3 of the 4
tires. He also showed us a pile of tires out back that he said had all
“Blown-Out”. We bought 4 tires with a higher load rating. We took the bad tires
with us on our whole vacation. After we got home, I tried to get a warranty from
the RV company, but was told, “We do not do warranties on the tires.” I then
contacted the tire manufacturer. The customer service manager stated that the
part where the cords overlapped was the strongest part of the tire. I called
“BS”. I tried to contact other departments at the tire company, but got no
replies. Why are tire companies allowed to sell these defective tires? I found
the RV owner’s comments interesting but rather confusing. One moment, he is
talking about depression, the next about bulges. Tire bulge versus depression
There is a big difference between a “bulge” that sticks outward from the rest of
the tire sidewall and a “depression” that goes inward toward the air chamber.
Most radials will have one or more sidewall depressions. These occur due to the
small overlap of the body cord ply that occurs when the tire is being “built.”
These depressions would actually be locations of more cords in that location
that prevent the inflated air from bulging a tire outward when inflated. A
bulge, as seen in the pictures below, would be the result of either an “open
body ply splice,” which would be a warranty issue, or the bulge could be the
result of an impact where body cords were broken. In this case, the tire clearly
hit something, and the body cords are broken. This condition is not covered by
any “warranty” unless a “road hazard” warranty was purchased. I have covered
impact breaks, with pictures, that I discovered on my personal car and on my
wife’s car, and posted the results of the forensic tire inspection with pictures
on my RV Tire Safety blog. Understanding the difference between a “bulge”
outward and a “depression” inward in a tire sidewall will save you much
aggravation. With close inspection in good sunlight, you can look at your tires
and find one or more depressions in every one of your tires. Holding a short
(approx. 6″) straight edge against the tire sidewall will help you discover the
depressions that are in your tires.
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