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09-05-2015, 12:09 PM
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#1
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: West Richland
Posts: 1,253
M.O.C. #17164
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Sailun 16" 637's
I am quite curious about these G rated 16" tires. I have heard lots of good about the GY G614's and also what great warrantee support they provide when they blowout. I still have not heard or read of a Sailun blowout so I am interested in their product. I have heard a lot of "waiting to see how they perform in the long run etc" but no real posts of them blowing out. Has anybody personally had a blowout or problem with them? Has anybody actually heard of a problem with them? Not trying to start a tire war, just trying to get good facts. I have Trailer Kings on my new 3160 RL LE and I am a bit nervous running them even though I am way under their rated capacity. I also am not happy with a 65 MPH. Speed Rating on them. It seems both Goodyear and Sailun have better speed ratings on their G series tires than the ST tires.
I was not quick enough when I ordered my unit to make them switch out the ST's to the higher quality G series.
I have read most of the other Sailun threads and will reread them. I still have not read anywhere about problems even on other sites on the web. I am only interested in Sailun problems and or blowouts.
Thanks in advance.
Tom Marty
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09-05-2015, 04:54 PM
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#2
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Montana Master
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Box Elder
Posts: 4,732
M.O.C. #12947
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I personally think the two tires are comparable in all specs. The only reason I went with the Goodyear's was availability. If the Sailun's ever get where they are widely stocked, I would swap to them, as they are much cheaper, while just as heavy. Whichever tire you decide to get, do it soon, before you have regrets due to severe damage to your new rig from a tire failure.
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Bob & Becky
2012 3402RL
2012 Chevy 2500HD D/A CC 4WD
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09-05-2015, 06:15 PM
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#3
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: West Richland
Posts: 1,253
M.O.C. #17164
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Thanks Bob.
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09-06-2015, 01:06 AM
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#4
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Site Team
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Wilsey
Posts: 18,799
M.O.C. #11455
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Was a thread on the Good Sam forum about a set where one came apart and the others deformed. The owner said they were over inflated by 10# by a service place and I believe he had them on his TV.
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Dick, Joyce, Diego, Picatso and Gustav
2017 3720 RL, and 2013 HC 343RL
Pullrite Hitch, IS, Disk Brakes, 3rd AC, Winegard Traveler, Bathroom door mod, Dometic 320, couch for desk swap, replaced chairs, sun screens, added awnings, etc.
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09-06-2015, 06:52 AM
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#5
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Montana Master
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Centerville
Posts: 1,352
M.O.C. #9051
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Quote:
quote:Originally posted by DQDick
Was a thread on the Good Sam forum about a set where one came apart and the others deformed. The owner said they were over inflated by 10# by a service place and I believe he had them on his TV.
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And it would be great to reference a link to that failure, yours is the first post that I have seen about a Sailun failure
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09-06-2015, 07:21 AM
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#6
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Montana Master
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Centerville
Posts: 1,352
M.O.C. #9051
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Quote:
quote:Originally posted by Dam Worker
I am quite curious about these G rated 16" tires. I have heard lots of good about the GY G614's and also what great warrantee support they provide when they blowout. I still have not heard or read of a Sailun blowout so I am interested in their product. I have heard a lot of "waiting to see how they perform in the long run etc" but no real posts of them blowing out. Has anybody personally had a blowout or problem with them? Has anybody actually heard of a problem with them? Not trying to start a tire war, just trying to get good facts. I have Trailer Kings on my new 3160 RL LE and I am a bit nervous running them even though I am way under their rated capacity. I also am not happy with a 65 MPH. Speed Rating on them. It seems both Goodyear and Sailun have better speed ratings on their G series tires than the ST tires.
I was not quick enough when I ordered my unit to make them switch out the ST's to the higher quality G series.
I have read most of the other Sailun threads and will reread them. I still have not read anywhere about problems even on other sites on the web. I am only interested in Sailun problems and or blowouts.
Thanks in advance.
Tom Marty
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I have read ,and reread as many Sailun threads as I could find, and have found no negative reports or failures.
I am seeing reports back as far as 2012, and yet all seem positive . I would hope DQDick will come up with the actual thread that he claims he read about a Sailun failure.
I do have to say the Sailun S637 is for trailer use only , so its possible the failure mentioned by DQ was on a TV , quite possible a different Sailun tire then what we are discussing for our fifth wheels
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09-06-2015, 07:42 AM
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#7
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Crossville
Posts: 184
M.O.C. #10367
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The Sailuns have been around for more than a few years. A friend just replaced his Sailuns after six years with no incidence. He replaced them because of age, and he replaced them with new Sailuns. I also replaced my tires with Sailuns at about $200 per tire less that the GY's would have cost me. The only issue with the Sailuns in the past have been availability; however, my Goodyear tire dealer in small town Tennessee was able to get them in 24 hours. If the tires DQDick mentioned was on a TV then they are not the S637's. They are for trailers only.
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Crossville, TN
2012 3455SA
2013 Ram 3500 Swd
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09-06-2015, 09:29 AM
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#8
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Montana Master
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Centerville
Posts: 1,352
M.O.C. #9051
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Quote:
quote:Originally posted by vangoes
The Sailuns have been around for more than a few years. A friend just replaced his Sailuns after six years with no incidence. He replaced them because of age, and he replaced them with new Sailuns. I also replaced my tires with Sailuns at about $200 per tire less that the GY's would have cost me. The only issue with the Sailuns in the past have been availability; however, my Goodyear tire dealer in small town Tennessee was able to get them in 24 hours. If the tires DQDick mentioned was on a TV then they are not the S637's. They are for trailers only.
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Talked to a Big O dealer here in Utah, and they carry the Sailun S637 . So some of the assumptions we keep hearing are not holding up.
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09-06-2015, 12:24 PM
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#9
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Site Team
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Wilsey
Posts: 18,799
M.O.C. #11455
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Quote:
quote:Originally posted by PSFORD99
Quote:
quote:Originally posted by DQDick
Was a thread on the Good Sam forum about a set where one came apart and the others deformed. The owner said they were over inflated by 10# by a service place and I believe he had them on his TV.
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And it would be great to reference a link to that failure, yours is the first post that I have seen about a Sailun failure
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Go halfway down the page: http://www.rvforum.net/SMF_forum/ind...?topic=55910.0
__________________
Dick, Joyce, Diego, Picatso and Gustav
2017 3720 RL, and 2013 HC 343RL
Pullrite Hitch, IS, Disk Brakes, 3rd AC, Winegard Traveler, Bathroom door mod, Dometic 320, couch for desk swap, replaced chairs, sun screens, added awnings, etc.
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09-06-2015, 01:15 PM
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#10
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Montana Master
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Sebring
Posts: 3,665
M.O.C. #9969
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I take most that I read on RV Net with a Block of Salt. Lots of mis-information there.
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Michelle & Ann
2018 Chevy 3500HD High Country DRW 4X4 Crew Cab w/Duramax/Allison, Formally 2010 Montana 2955RL, Now Loaded 2016 SOB, Mor/ryde IS, Disc Brakes & Pin Box, Comfort Ride Hitch, Sailun 17.5 Tires.
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09-06-2015, 02:09 PM
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#11
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Montana Master
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Chilliwack
Posts: 1,520
M.O.C. #12935
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The tire in the thread referenced by DQDick was on the TV and was on one of the dual wheels. We have no idea what tires these were, other than they were Sailun brand, however they could have been S637's.
If these tires had been more readily available in my area I would "not" have spent double the price on G614's. I do know how well the Goodyear G614 stands up and highly recommend them, however I do believe the S637 may be equally as good, it is a much cheaper, all steel, radial trailer tire. It is a "G" rated tire and the maximum speed rating is 75mph (if that is not fast enough to be pulling your 5er then I don't want to be on the same road with you all). Max inflation pressure "cold" is 110 psi. "cold" meaning the ambient air temp before the tire has been driven.
You can read what you want to read into some posts on this and other sites regarding tires however for the most part when we read of failures we normally are not given all the facts and "everyone" always has the pressures right and not overloaded....right....
Many of the lighter RV's out there have traveled thousands of miles on LT tires provided the units they are installed on do not exceed the rating of the tires, this has been referenced many times on this and other forums, for those with lighter units this is a great alternative to ST tires particularly if you have a heavy foot.
I am pretty sure if G614 or S637 were tires rated for only 65 mph and were put on trailers that stretched or exceeded their load capacity in the numbers the Marathons are used you would have significant numbers of reported failures, we should not forget that possibility.
Link to Sailun all position tire specs: http://www.sailuntires.ca/images2/637/637.pdf
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09-06-2015, 02:21 PM
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#12
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: West Richland
Posts: 1,253
M.O.C. #17164
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Ed I think you are correct in comparing a product that is used in an extremely large amount of rigs verse a product that is better but not sold in near the numbers of the lighter lower rated tires. That would or could cause us to really only hear about the lower rated tires that are out there on almost all new TT fifth-wheels and cargo trailers.
Tom marty
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09-07-2015, 04:23 PM
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#13
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Montana Master
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Centerville
Posts: 1,352
M.O.C. #9051
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Quote:
quote:Originally posted by Irlpguy
The tire in the thread referenced by DQDick was on the TV and was on one of the dual wheels. We have no idea what tires these were, other than they were Sailun brand, however they could have been S637's.
If these tires had been more readily available in my area I would "not" have spent double the price on G614's. I do know how well the Goodyear G614 stands up and highly recommend them, however I do believe the S637 may be equally as good, it is a much cheaper, all steel, radial trailer tire. It is a "G" rated tire and the maximum speed rating is 75mph (if that is not fast enough to be pulling your 5er then I don't want to be on the same road with you all). Max inflation pressure "cold" is 110 psi. "cold" meaning the ambient air temp before the tire has been driven.
You can read what you want to read into some posts on this and other sites regarding tires however for the most part when we read of failures we normally are not given all the facts and "everyone" always has the pressures right and not overloaded....right....
Many of the lighter RV's out there have traveled thousands of miles on LT tires provided the units they are installed on do not exceed the rating of the tires, this has been referenced many times on this and other forums, for those with lighter units this is a great alternative to ST tires particularly if you have a heavy foot.
I am pretty sure if G614 or S637 were tires rated for only 65 mph and were put on trailers that stretched or exceeded their load capacity in the numbers the Marathons are used you would have significant numbers of reported failures, we should not forget that possibility.
Link to Sailun all position tire specs: http://www.sailuntires.ca/images2/637/637.pdf
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If the tire in question was S637 , it was being used in the wrong application, the S637 is for trailer use only.
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09-07-2015, 05:22 PM
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#14
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: West Richland
Posts: 1,253
M.O.C. #17164
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PSFORD99, thanks for the link.
I will be looking into these S637 tires as I usually tow the speed limit or close to it, which is basically 55,60,65 or 70 where I live here in Eastern Washington. Higher in parts of Idaho and Montana, little bit lower in Oregon but that is supposed to be changing soon to 70 MPH in parts of Eastern Oregon. Towing with the Trailer King at 65/70 now makes me a little bit nervous. Having the speed rating at 75 MPH would just give me more peace of mind.
Tom Marty
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09-10-2015, 09:01 AM
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#15
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Established Member
Join Date: May 2015
Location: Muscle Shoals
Posts: 23
M.O.C. #17410
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Those Sailun tires are 1/2 the price because the Chinese Govt manipulates their currency, pollutes their air and water, abuses their workers, and cheats on the import export stage. We can't compete against that.
Lets reward that behavior by buying them because they are cheap.
Heck - if we do it enough, soon me might be able to kill one of the last manufacturers we have in the US and say goodbye to more US manufacturing jobs.
Besides - the Chinese need more $$'s to continue their military buildup. So lets keep buying!!
Did you hear they were parading their Navy a few weeks ago just outside of our territorial limits off California?
Remember - the money you send them today will help to defeat us tomorrow.
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Susi B
Muscle Shoals, Al
Make America Great again...
One Goodyear Tire at a Time.
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09-10-2015, 04:03 PM
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#16
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: West Richland
Posts: 1,253
M.O.C. #17164
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Most of that sounds like how American CEO's and the companies they control treat the American worker. Maybe you should look and see how the US workers pay is not even close to keeping up with inflation and the typical worker is now making way less than what we did five, ten or twenty years ago. Very few American companies treat their workers as an asset anymore, usually they are now treated as a liability. Be careful where you buy your food, gas, household products, vehicles and RV's as I doubt that you will find much that does not have some parts imported from a foreign country. Look at the vehicles being assembled in Mexico or other countries. I am sure that Goodyear does not buy anything for their products from outside the good old USA. Heck I would be shocked if they would actually import tires and sell them under their Name. I sure hope the Goodyear Marathon was never made in China. Oh by the way I drive an Accord made by Honda in the USA with parts and pieces made here and abroad. I love America but too much of it has become a politically correct, and overpopulated with people who do not even want to work, let alone actually pay taxes.
Ok back to tires. So in all of my snooping around on the net I can't really find much that talks about a Sailon blowout in my 16" tire size. I will give Goodyear credit for supposedly paying for damage to RV's from the 614's blowing out. Makes me wonder why they blowout as they look like a real good tire. Their cost of around 350.00 is extremely expensive but I guess everything is expensive seeing inflation just makes our money worth less and less.
Tom Marty
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09-11-2015, 02:09 AM
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#17
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Established Member
Join Date: May 2015
Location: Muscle Shoals
Posts: 23
M.O.C. #17410
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Great argument. I stand corrected. Perfect justification for sending our dollars to China.
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Susi B
Muscle Shoals, Al
Make America Great again...
One Goodyear Tire at a Time.
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09-11-2015, 08:23 AM
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#18
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Montana Master
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Pensacola (mail forward service)
Posts: 3,198
M.O.C. #13740
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Those americans jobs weren't sucked out of the states, they were sent to various countries by american companies that wanted more profit for the board of directors. When I was working in the corporate world, the company that I worked for used mexico, taiwan, china for computer assembies, parts, and in case of taiwan...laptop computers. A fact of gobal economy is that no country has a lot of their products made in their own country....21st century. The US has always been great at being on the forefront of tecnolgy and education in the sciences. That is where we need to get back to! NOW, tires, all have a code on them that say where they are made and one can look the code up on the internet. Most of the tire molds were once u.s. made, but that was 1960's. If you can afford the sole u.s. made tire for heavier trailers, you should be using them. The people who can't afford them have to deal with the lower quality chinese tires. Some of us went beyond g rated and use u.s. made goodyear, michelins, and sumitomo from japan. No one should be slighted or insulted because of the tires they use on their rv or tow vehicles. We state our opinions about issues on the forum and try to help people of all income levels, etc. Sorry to the members for my tirade on this thread! John
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2012 F350 6.7 L dually, 2013 3800RE with 6 pt leveling, Sumitomo 17.5" load range h tires, Samsung 18 cu ft residential fridge, 8k Morryde I.S. with disc brakes. Full timing since 2012.
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09-11-2015, 11:12 AM
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#19
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Montana Fan
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: rockwall
Posts: 335
M.O.C. #7697
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I think I would take what NRA-girl has to say with a grain of salt.
She's 54 years old which doesn't match her picture, that's for sure.
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09-11-2015, 12:16 PM
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#20
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: West Richland
Posts: 1,253
M.O.C. #17164
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John I consider your post as good information, not a tirade. A lot has happened to the USA since the sixties. Unfortunately it is not like the sixties anymore, don't get me wrong I like almost all of the new conveniences that I get to enjoy. I am real happy with Radial tires verse Bias Ply etc. people need to get what works for them, that is why we have lots of choices to choose from.
Tom Marty
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