Glossary

Casing

Last reviewed: 2026-05-20

The structural body of the tire beneath the tread rubber — comprising the radial cord plies, steel belt layers, bead wire bundles, and sidewall rubber — that gives the tire its load-carrying capability and shape. The casing is the long-term investment in a commercial tire: premium casings from recognized tire brands are designed to survive multiple retread cycles, extending their value beyond the first tread life. Casing condition at removal determines retreading eligibility — a casing run flat, severely underinflated, improperly repaired, or damaged by a road hazard may be rejected at retreader inspection even if it appears serviceable from the outside.

Casing condition matters for two reasons: safety in current service and retread eligibility after removal. A casing run flat or severely underinflated may sustain internal structural damage — cord fatigue, belt edge separation, or innerliner cracking — that is not visible from the outside. That same damage disqualifies the casing from retreading even if tread depth remains. Fleet programs that protect casing condition through timely inflation management and early removal at the fleet pull depth recover far more casing credit value than programs that allow repeated underinflation.

Real-World Use

A fleet removes drive tires from a well-managed tractor — inflated correctly throughout, pulled at the fleet's 6/32 inch threshold, with no history of flat operation. The retreader accepts all eight casings, crediting their value against the next retread purchase. Six months later, a different tractor delivers drive tires from a pressure-loss incident: two casings are rejected at retreader inspection because internal cord damage from underinflation makes them unsuitable for retreading. Those two casings have no credit value.

What to Pair It With

Read this term with the full tire sidewall, vehicle rating information, manufacturer documentation, and the actual condition of the tire.

This site is for general information only. It does not replace professional tire service, DOT compliance advice, tire manufacturer instructions, vehicle manufacturer recommendations, or fleet policy.