โMar-20-2014 11:51 PM
Maryland House Bill 580 would require a tire dealer who sells a tire more than three years old to give the buyer a written statement that the tire is not new, and that many automobile manufacturers recommend that a tire should be replaced after six years, regardless of the remaining tread depth
โMar-25-2014 06:13 AM
D & M wrote:
...... No one has a specific number. Six, seven, ten. Take your pick. I don't agree or disagree with the theory, I just think that the Maryland House has more important things to worry about.
โMar-25-2014 03:20 AM
D & M wrote:
No one has a specific number. Six, seven, ten. Take your pick. I don't agree or disagree with the theory, I just think that the Maryland House has more important things to worry about.
โMar-25-2014 03:17 AM
wny_pat wrote:D & M wrote:
Where did the sponsor of the bill get his expertise in tire manufacturing? The truth is, no one knows when tires are supposed to be replaced. The major manufacturers can't even agree. The DOT doesn't have a position on this, so I don't see where the nanny's in the House of Delegates need to protect me.
Actually the DOT has it down pretty well: http://www.safercar.gov/Vehicle+Shoppers/Tires/Tires+Rating/Tire+Aging
โMar-24-2014 03:42 PM
OldRadios wrote:Wonder if any of them have ever been in the average distributobship warehouse. Hot as hell in the summer, well over 100 degrees! And at night they really cool off because there is no insulation. That can't be good for tires.
I like this line:
"Tire dealers testifying at the hearing agreed that heat, punctures and poor handling accelerate the degradation of a tire, but insisted that with proper storage a tire can last many years.
"A 10-year-old tire can be better than a newer tire that's sat out in the sun," said Ralph Schissler, president of Atlantic Tire in Baltimore."
Don't have a garage? Just remove your tires and store them each time between uses...
I have to agree that the part about informing the buyers that their new tires they just bought are already three years old is a good idea.
โMar-24-2014 03:32 PM
D & M wrote:
Where did the sponsor of the bill get his expertise in tire manufacturing? The truth is, no one knows when tires are supposed to be replaced. The major manufacturers can't even agree. The DOT doesn't have a position on this, so I don't see where the nanny's in the House of Delegates need to protect me.
โMar-24-2014 03:05 PM
OldRadios wrote:
I like this line:
Don't have a garage? Just remove your tires and store them each time between uses...
โMar-24-2014 02:57 PM
OldRadios wrote:
I have to agree that the part about informing the buyers that their new tires they just bought are already three years old is a good idea.
โMar-24-2014 02:08 PM
โMar-24-2014 12:44 PM
โMar-24-2014 12:13 PM
path1 wrote:
Maybe good for consumer??Maryland House Bill 580 would require a tire dealer who sells a tire more than three years old to give the buyer a written statement that the tire is not new, and that many automobile manufacturers recommend that a tire should be replaced after six years, regardless of the remaining tread depth
https://www.tirebusiness.com/article/20140214/NEWS/140219938/proposed-bill-on-tire-aging-draws-fire-...
โMar-23-2014 03:26 PM
โMar-22-2014 06:59 PM
โMar-22-2014 05:48 PM
mpierce wrote:
I would wager that even the 10 yr that Michelin and Cooper quote, are a "worse case" scenario.
Which would be very hot climates, out in the sun full time, etc.
If you live in a cooler climate, less sun farther north, etc., that tire probably will be good for quite a bit longer than 10 yrs. With inspection of course.
I am using truck tires here on the farm that are over 20 years old, looking good. Local use, not a lot of miles. Takes FOREVER to wear them out. Still look good.
These large, truck tires are very well built. Much more so than the cheap, China bomb trailer tires that get talked about.
โMar-22-2014 05:45 PM
rickeoni wrote:
Any tire manufacturer will tell you if the the DOT code is over three years old it can not be sold as a new tire. Also anything over 6 years old should be changed as the tire is starting to degrade. This is from tire manufacturers and not me.....
I bet a lot of people are going to go and check the date code on their tires now.