Do I Need a New Tire? - Check Tire Wear at 40K Miles

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In summary, the customer's car needed new tires, but he was not convinced that they needed to be replaced all at once. He looked at the tires and found that one tire was worn more than the others. He was told that the tires were in the red and needed to be replaced immediately, but he didn't think that was necessary. He was also told that it is important to replace tires in pairs, rotate them, and to check for wear bars. He was told that if he still had a new spare tire, he could keep the best of the worn tires as a spare.
  • #1
leroyjenkens
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When I got an oil change at my car dealership, I was told that my car needed new tires. I've had them since I got the car 40,000 miles ago. They said that they were "in the red", which I took as meaning they needed to be changed immediately. Well, when I got the car home, I looked at the tires and they all looked fine to me. My front driver's side tire seemed worn more than the others, though. I guess that's because of 99% of the time, it's just me in the car.
Just by looking at the pictures, would you say they'd need to be changed? I could understand replacing my front driver's side tire, because that one looks pretty worn, but I see no justification in replacing all of them just because one is worn a lot.
The first picture is my front passenger's side tire (All the tires basically look like this except for the front driver's side tire), and the second picture is my front driver's side tire.
Thanks.
 

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  • #2
I had to switch after 50 000 km so not even 40 000 miles, I am pretty sure you had better do it and all of them. Reasons? Less hassle for yourself.
 
  • #3
Can't tell from the pictures but look to see if the wear bars are flush with the remaining tread. If you don't have wear bars, you can use the penny test in the link below.

http://www.catsautorepair.com/TireMaintenance.html#2
 
  • #4
The circled tread does look to be nearly gone. Since the wear is worst on one side, it could be due to it's wheel being misaligned. If you get new tires, be sure to get a wheel alignment, with the new tires mounted, or the new set will wear out too soon again.

attachment.php?attachmentid=69956&stc=1&d=1400712375.jpg
 

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  • #5
leroyjenkens said:
I could understand replacing my front driver's side tire, because that one looks pretty worn, but I see no justification in replacing all of them just because one is worn a lot.

You want to left and right tires on each axle to have the same amount of tread (unless you drive like a 90-year-old!), so you normally replace them in pairs unless a nearly-new tire gets damaged for some reason.

It's not a good idea to have new tires on one axle and very worn ones on the other, If you get into an emergency situation you don't want one end of the car to be more skid-prone than the other end!

Of course if you still have a new spare tire, you can keep the best of the worn ones as a spare.

FWIW I get about 30,000 to 35,000 miles from the front tires on a front wheel drive car (which is about the same as lendav_rott) and maybe 50,000 from the rear. Rear tires sometimes die from old age (the sidewalls start to crack or bulge) or accidental damage rather than the tread wearing down.

The mileage you get depends on the price of the tire (at least in the UK). "Budget" tires might only last 15,000 miles not 30,000, so they all cost about the same per mile in the long run.
 
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  • #6
The rule of thumb is if you stick a penny in head-first and can see all of Abe's head, the tread is too thin. There is a good reason to replace them before they are completely bald: if you wait to replace the tires after they are completely bald, you risk replacing them after you crash your car.

Also, you need to start rotating your tires so they wear evenly.
 
  • #7
I guess the regulations are vary in different parts of the world. In mine, an emergency braking test is required before a vehicle can be re-registered -- roughly, in what distance does the vehicle stop from a specified speed with brakes applied as hard as possible.

Even so, the standards are too weak (imho). I have a very steep driveway which becomes slippery and dangerous in the wet. If my wheels start to spin while driving up in the rain, I know from experience that it's time to get new tyres on the drive wheels. Curiously, this seems to be almost independent of how many kms the tyres have done (I do very few kms, and the car is always garaged). The tread on the tyres still looks fine. There seems to be some kind of aging process occurring in the rubber -- simply being 2-3 years old means it doesn't grip as well. New tyres fix the problem immediately.

This makes me suspect that most people are actually driving around on unsafe tyres. I.e., if they had to jam on the brakes really hard, their car would take too long to stop. Taxis are the worst: sometimes they try to come up my driveway instead of waiting at the bottom, but they don't even make it halfway -- in the dry(!).
 
  • #8
russ_watters said:
There is a good reason to replace them before they are completely bald: if you wait to replace the tires after they are completely bald, you risk replacing them after you crash your car.

I suppose you don't mean "completely bald" literally. I don't know the US regulations, but in the UK the minimum legal requirement is 1.6mm (1/16 inch) of tread in a continuous band covering 3/4 of the tire width in contact with the road and the full circumference.

AFAIK the tire tread wear indicators on UK tires are 2mm deep to give a bit of tolerance over the 1.6mm limit. I don't know if tread wear indicators on tires are a legal requirement in the UK but I haven't seen a car tire without them for decades.

The maximum penalties for illegal tires in the UK are a £2500 fine and 3 penalty points on your driving license per tire.
 
  • #9
What I find troubling is that your tires are wearing unevenly. Like Russ mentioned, they need to be rotated to function properly.

From the pics you posted, the second one has a band of baldness that the first one doesn't have. That may have been caused by having low pressure for a long time. Or maybe they aren't balanced right, or maybe your car has a warped chassis due to a previous accident? Regardless, it's dangerous to drive on that tire much longer. If I were you I'd get new tires.

If you can't afford it now, put the bald ones on the back. If you're going to have a blow-out, it's much safer to get it on the back than on the front, especially at high speeds.

Oh and you might want to avoid high speeds until you get safe tires.

Band of Baldness would be an awesome name for a punk rock group, IMO.
 
  • #10
AlephZero said:
I suppose you don't mean "completely bald" literally. I don't know the US regulations, but in the UK the minimum legal requirement is 1.6mm (1/16 inch) of tread in a continuous band covering 3/4 of the tire width in contact with the road and the full circumference.
I meant completely bald. I've seen tires on friends cars that had essentially zero tread.

Not all states do inspections (auto regulations come from the states) and even then they are at best annual, so there is no way the government can know for sure how much tread is on your tires -- and those tires in the OP looked pretty thin.

And I've been there myself: I occasionally won't be paying attention and have been shocked at how thin the tread is.
 
  • #11
lisab said:
If you're going to have a blow-out, it's much safer to get it on the back than on the front, especially at high speeds.
That's re-assuring. In the northeast US, we had one of the coldest and snowiest winters on record this year. My car has low profile tires (my girlfriend thinks I want to be a gangsta, but I just like the way they look and handle) and I destroyed both front tires and one rim in three days in March, when the snow melted and the potholes were exposed. I was on my way home from returning a loaner when I blew the second.

The second tire didn't actually explode (neither did, actually), it just bulged-out the sidewall like an aneurysm. But there was no way I was going to keep driving on it - tires explode when they are under stress, which means they do it when you need them most: high speed, a sharp corner, heavy braking, etc. It's just too dangerous to risk it. Reiterate for emphasis:
Regardless, it's dangerous to drive on that tire much longer. If I were you I'd get new tires.
My gangsta tires are absurdly expensive, but if the OP has normal tires, it really shouldn't be much money to replace them: less than two tanks of gas. Just suck it up and do it.

Band of Baldness would be an awesome name for a punk rock group, IMO.
That sounds like my forehead: I'm in.
 
  • #12
lisab said:
What I find troubling is that your tires are wearing unevenly. Like Russ mentioned, they need to be rotated to function properly.

From the pics you posted, the second one has a band of baldness that the first one doesn't have. That may have been caused by having low pressure for a long time. Or maybe they aren't balanced right, or maybe your car has a warped chassis due to a previous accident? Regardless, it's dangerous to drive on that tire much longer. If I were you I'd get new tires.

If you can't afford it now, put the bald ones on the back. If you're going to have a blow-out, it's much safer to get it on the back than on the front, especially at high speeds.

Oh and you might want to avoid high speeds until you get safe tires.

Band of Baldness would be an awesome name for a punk rock group, IMO.

Most tire retailers and auto dealerships now insist that, if only two tires are purchased, they must both go on the rear. I really questioned that until I saw the video below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--Hb5kQCaTg&feature=youtu.be

I find Discount Tire's 6 months to pay and 0% interest deal works for me. On the other hand if you miss a payment the interest rate jumps up to about 27%.:cry:
 
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  • #13
edward said:
Most tire retailers and auto dealerships now insist that, if only two tires are purchased, they must both go on the rear. I really questioned that until I saw the video below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--Hb5kQCaTg&feature=youtu.be
That makes sense except for one problem they don't address: if the tires with the better tread are on the back, won't that just result in a continuing divergence in tire wear? Deeper tread is more important for back tires, but front tires wear faster. They don't address that issue and I'd be curious to know how to resolve it.
 
  • #14
russ_watters said:
That makes sense except for one problem they don't address: if the tires with the better tread are on the back, won't that just result in a continuing divergence in tire wear?
Probably would depend on which wheels are doing the driving and/or the operator. :devil:


http://cdn.carthrottle.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Burnout_600.jpg
 
  • #15
leroyjenkens said:
My front driver's side tire seemed worn more than the others, though.

AlephZero said:
FWIW I get about 30,000 to 35,000 miles from the front tires on a front wheel drive car (which is about the same as lendav_rott) and maybe 50,000 from the rear.

Why don't you rotate tires?
 
  • #16
lisab said:
If you can't afford it now, put the bald ones on the back.

To add to the video what edward already posted: few years ago we had an early snow in Warsaw. My neighbor started replacing summer tires, and he replaced the front ones, but for some reason could not complete the operation, so he got on the move with winter tires on the front and summer tires on the back. After about 5 miles he did 360 when changing the lines on a three line bridge across Wisła river and hit some other car, luckily nothing happened to him nor other people.

And his driving skills are way above average, he did some rally driving in the past.

Tires with a better grip on the back. Always.
 
  • #17
Don't you have little 'knobs' inside the center thread?
Over here when this knobs are level with the surface you should get new tires. Although I probably wouldn't check them often enough.
 
  • #18
JorisL said:
Don't you have little 'knobs' inside the center thread?
I believe they are called wear bars. {edit} I see Borg mentioned that yesterday. Oops. {/edit}

http://news.preferredautogroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/tire_wear_bars-001.jpg​
Over here when this knobs are level with the surface you should get new tires.
Over here, we do to.
Although I probably wouldn't check them often enough.
Ditto.
 
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  • #19
russ_watters said:
That makes sense except for one problem they don't address: if the tires with the better tread are on the back, won't that just result in a continuing divergence in tire wear? Deeper tread is more important for back tires, but front tires wear faster. They don't address that issue and I'd be curious to know how to resolve it.

I think that it is a liability issue more than anything. I don't think that they care about the fronts wearing faster. From my own experience I have noticed that it can also be a sales gimmick. A salesman once told me in regards to the situation: "Now you are going to have worn tires on the front drive wheels."

They told my daughter that they couldn't put the rear tires on the front because one was worn more than the other and it could cause damage to the differential. This can be a valid point, but she sent me pictures of the tires and I told her how to measure the tread. The tires were fine for the front. It was all sales hype.
 
  • #20
Thanks for the advice. I guess I'll just go ahead and get them all changed. I've driven 40k miles on them, so even if I don't have to change them all now, they're probably nearing the end of their life, right?
My gangsta tires are absurdly expensive, but if the OP has normal tires, it really shouldn't be much money to replace them: less than two tanks of gas. Just suck it up and do it.
When I got my oil changed at my car dealership, they said they had a deal where I could replace all 4 tires and they would balance them and do an alignment, all for the low low price of $550. Is that too much? Everywhere I look, it seems like I'm going to have to pay about $100 for each tire, and I'm not sure how much an alignment is. I guess I'll just call each car store and see who has the best price.
 
  • #21
No need to go nuts, what are the state of the rears? If they are decent stick them on the front and just get 2 new ones at the back. Alignment check and off you go.
 
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  • #22
russ_watters said:
That makes sense except for one problem they don't address: if the tires with the better tread are on the back, won't that just result in a continuing divergence in tire wear? Deeper tread is more important for back tires, but front tires wear faster. They don't address that issue and I'd be curious to know how to resolve it.

Why is there an issue to address? If you need more tread on the rear for stability and the front tread wears faster, that is stable siituation.

The total amount of tread wear per mile is independent of how the tires are rotated. Rotating them doesn't save you any money in the long term, providing the wheel tracking is correct. It just means you can replace your tires in batches of 4 at a time instead of 2 at a time.

There is a second factor in a climate with regular long-term winter snow, in that you need more than the minimum tread on the front wheels for traction. But if you fit winter tires or use snow chains, that is a different issue.
 
  • #23
I agree with the above.

On FWD, the rears basically don't wear at all. Age will kill a set of rears before wear does.

So after burning through some fronts, then swapping rear to front means you have almost full tread depth. Plus you should only ever need to replace two tyres at in one go.
 
  • #24
xxChrisxx said:
I agree with the above.

On FWD, the rears basically don't wear at all. Age will kill a set of rears before wear does.

So after burning through some fronts, then swapping rear to front means you have almost full tread depth. Plus you should only ever need to replace two tyres at in one go.

I don't see it that way. If a driver starts out with four tires of equal tread depth, or new tires, they should all be worn down relatively even if rotated properly. Then again it I suppose it can be a personal preference to wear the fronts out first.

Sometimes we just can't win. If the wheels are aligned properly it keeps the vehicle from wandering down from the high crown of the road. This necessity even causes wear.
 
  • #25
edward said:
If a driver starts out with four tires of equal tread depth, or new tires, they should all be worn down relatively even if rotated properly.

I think you are missing the point of the video you posted. Driving in wet conditions, you don't want the rear tires to have the minimum amount of tread, period. The important number is the absolute depth of tread, not the relative depths on the front and rear.

The minimum amount of tread on the front is less hazardous because you can feel the lack of grip through the steering. And if the front starts to slide you understeer, which is easier and more instinctive to correct than dealing with a 180 degree spin when the rear slides.
 
  • #26
AlephZero said:
I think you are missing the point of the video you posted. Driving in wet conditions, you don't want the rear tires to have the minimum amount of tread, period. The important number is the absolute depth of tread, not the relative depths on the front and rear.

The minimum amount of tread on the front is less hazardous because you can feel the lack of grip through the steering. And if the front starts to slide you understeer, which is easier and more instinctive to correct than dealing with a 180 degree spin when the rear slides.

I know the point of the video I posted in a reply to another post. It dramatized why tire companies will only put just two new tires on the rear. It seems to me the topic had veered into the wear issue on the front tires and I addressed that. Most tires come with a tread wear warranty. That warranty requires that the tires be rotated.

Oh Oh that is another " we can't win situation."

edited
 
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  • #27
I recently had a tire place tell me that I had to replace all 4 tires or it would be dangerous, and they all had to be the same make, I couldn't have the same tire from different companies. Luckily, I had roadside assistance from my insurance come out to add air to one tire and I told him what I was told and he said it was a crock.

He told me of several reputable tire places, saved me $400 because my tires are sport tires and hard to find.
 
  • #28
AlephZero said:
Why is there an issue to address?
The issue to address is that it contradicts the common advice that you should rotate your tires. Look, I get the logic of what you guys are saying. It does make sense. What I want to know is why I've never heard this before and instead I hear everywhere that you should rotate your tires!? And it can't just be that Jiffy Lube is trying to sell me services I don't need if my owner's manual is saying the same thing:
To equalize tread wear, it is recommended that the tires be rotated every 12,000 km...
http://www.kia.ca/content/ownership/ownersmanual/13optima_en.pdf

That's the same advice I've seen everywhere I've ever looked before yesterday. So is it wrong virtually everywhere?

Edit:
Actually, I do disagree with one part:
The total amount of tread wear per mile is independent of how the tires are rotated. Rotating them doesn't save you any money in the long term, providing the wheel tracking is correct.
That is only true if your driving patterns are exactly symmetrical, which they are pretty much guaranteed not to be due to the geometry of roads (left turns are wider and gentler than right turns, cloverleafs are all high speed right turns).
 
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  • #29
leroyjenkens said:
Thanks for the advice. I guess I'll just go ahead and get them all changed. I've driven 40k miles on them, so even if I don't have to change them all now, they're probably nearing the end of their life, right?
Yes.
When I got my oil changed at my car dealership, they said they had a deal where I could replace all 4 tires and they would balance them and do an alignment, all for the low low price of $550. Is that too much? Everywhere I look, it seems like I'm going to have to pay about $100 for each tire, and I'm not sure how much an alignment is. I guess I'll just call each car store and see who has the best price.
Well, I guessed wrong. $100 tires isn't cheap, it's medium priced. Try tirerack.com
 
  • #30
My tires, cheapest price are $150 each, been told almost $200 each, then there is the cost to install them. But like I said, they're odd sized sports tires. They're huge. One place refused to replace just one, they would only do all four. I passed. I'm not racing my car, so it doesn't matter.
 
  • #31
Front tires suffer from edge wear for obvious reasons - they move - which is why rotation will prolong tire life. Differential wear on one side signals you have an alignment problem. Unless you weigh over 200 kg, passenger weight is not an issue. The suspension system balances the load. Get your alignment checked. Proper alignment will do more to improve tire life than almost anything else.
 
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  • #32
russ_watters said:
The issue to address is that it contradicts the common advice that you should rotate your tires. Look, I get the logic of what you guys are saying. It does make sense. What I want to know is why I've never heard this before and instead I hear everywhere that you should rotate your tires!?

I don't see a (serious) contradiction. Rotating tires guarantees uniform wear, so the difference between wear on back and front is never large enough to be of a real importance. Problems start when the differences are large.
 
  • #33
1. Can't tell from the photos whether the inside edge tread is worn down like the outside edge tread.
If both edges are worn more than the center that's under-inflation, just one edge is alignment.
2. On a front drive car you want the best tires on the rear. Reason is in wet slippery conditions you need the rear tires to behave like a rudder.
http://www.tirereview.com/always-install-two-new-tires-on-the-rear-axle/

Draw a free body diagram of the car viewed from above...
When you take your foot off the gas, the front wheels are now pushing backward.
On the slightest deviation from straight ahead(yaw), the cg is no longer aligned with the front wheels' center of effort.
Forward force (MA) against cg isn't aligned with opposing force from front wheels, so you have a "couple" that tries to rotate the car. More rotation makes the couple bigger.
Rear wheels need to have traction so they can exert sideways force to oppose the rotation.

So the question is, which axle do you want to lose traction last? The one that causes rotation or the one that opposes rotation? Put the new tires there.
Front drive cars with bad tires have a propensity in wet conditions to swap ends.
 
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  • #34
Borek said:
I don't see a (serious) contradiction. Rotating tires guarantees uniform wear, so the difference between wear on back and front is never large enough to be of a real importance. Problems start when the differences are large.
Unless you blow two front tires in 3 days like I just did. That's part of why I'm asking. My car now has tires with 30,000 miles on them on the back and new tires on the front. The advice I'm getting here suggests I am doing that wrong. While my manual doesn't explicitly have this situation, it implies even wear is important and never mentions putting new tires on the back if even wear becomes unworkable.

The manual's advice would seem to have very limited applicability because as soon as something happens to make the wear uneven, you'd never get it back under the new tires in back theory.
 
  • #35
I was thinking that rotating tires was probably more important when tires weren't as well constructed. But after seeing how much I don't know about tires, I'm sure I'm wrong.
 

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