Manufacturing excellence

Repeatable processes produce dependable tires.

From raw-material receipt to container loading, controls are designed to protect compound consistency, tire uniformity, structural integrity, and shipment traceability.

Quality assurance laboratory

Measured, documented, and released against specification

Finished-tire quality is evaluated through dimensional checks, tread-depth verification, marking review, visual inspection, and program-specific performance testing.

Inspection results are tied to production identity so technical questions and warranty reviews can be traced back to the relevant product and batch information.

Quality technician measuring tire tread depth in the inspection laboratory
Representative final-inspection activity: dimensional verification, tread measurement, marking review, and visual workmanship checks.

Production sequence

How a radial tire moves through the factory

Each stage creates an input for the next. A small dimensional or temperature deviation early in production can affect finished-tire performance, so inspection is built into the process rather than reserved for the end.

Raw-material qualification

Natural rubber, synthetic rubber, steel cord, bead wire, textile, carbon black, silica, oils, and curatives are received against approved supplier and material specifications. Identity, condition, and selected physical properties are checked before release.

Compound mixing

Computer-controlled internal mixers combine polymers and ingredients in staged cycles. Time, temperature, rotor energy, and sequence are monitored. Compound samples may be checked for rheometer response, viscosity, dispersion, and density.

Component preparation

Tread and sidewall compounds are extruded to profile. Innerliner, body ply, and steel-belt materials are calendered and cut to specified width and angle. Bead bundles are formed and insulated.

Tire building

Components are assembled on building drums in a defined sequence. Splice location, overlap, centering, tension, and component alignment are controlled to create a consistent green tire.

Curing

The green tire is shaped and vulcanized in a mold under controlled pressure, temperature, and time. The cure cycle forms the tread and sidewall markings while crosslinking the compound system.

Final inspection and release

Appearance, dimensions, markings, and workmanship are checked. Uniformity and dynamic balance are applied by product program, with X-ray or other internal inspection used according to the control plan.

Quality plan

Controls that matter to commercial buyers

Control pointWhat is checkedWhy it mattersTypical record
Compound batchMixing parameters and laboratory propertiesWear, heat, adhesion, process stabilityBatch and lab release record
Prepared componentsWidth, gauge, weight, profile, cut angleUniform construction and material distributionIn-process inspection sheet
BuildingSplices, alignment, centering, green-tire weightUniformity and structural consistencyMachine / operator record
CurePress, mold, time, temperature, pressureCorrect vulcanization and appearanceCuring trace
Finished tireVisual, markings, dimensions, uniformity/balanceFitment, ride, regulatory identityFinal inspection and test results
ShipmentSKU, quantity, marks, batches, loadingOrder accuracy and claim traceabilityPacking list and loading record

Verification and certification

Testing aligned to product and market

Applicable test plans may include endurance, high-speed performance, bead unseating, strength, dimensional verification, rolling resistance, wet-grip evaluation, or other requirements. The exact plan depends on tire category, size, target regulation, and customer specification.

Important certification note

DOT and ECE markings must correspond to the specific approved product. The quoted SKU list is reconciled with required marks and available documentation before shipment.

Display of quality management, DOT and ECE compliance certificates
Certification evidence is supplied for the applicable product program; approvals are verified by tire family, size, construction, and destination.

Private label

Sidewall artwork, naming, mold feasibility, and legal marking zones are reviewed before approval. Tooling and MOQ depend on program scope.

Pre-shipment inspection

Buyer-appointed third-party inspection can be accommodated when included in the purchase terms and scheduled before loading.

Continuous improvement

Claims, test results, process trends, and buyer feedback are reviewed to identify corrective and preventive actions.