โAug-05-2022 11:53 PM
โSep-26-2022 11:55 AM
โSep-26-2022 11:25 AM
โAug-10-2022 06:16 AM
Grit dog wrote:JRscooby wrote:
All these signs of excessive tire wear can be corrected with a adjustment between the driver's ears.
Whatever bud.
โAug-09-2022 12:36 PM
JRscooby wrote:
All these signs of excessive tire wear can be corrected with a adjustment between the driver's ears.
โAug-09-2022 12:02 PM
Grit dog wrote:
Example, after some wear, you notice the feathering of the rear tires on the leading edges? Easy to feel the tread feathering at the sipes in the tread.
This is not a problem but simply wear from the treads gripping while accelerating. If you swap the rears side to side, it reverses the rotation and corrects this deficiency, until they begin to feather the opposite direction.
In general, front tires feather the opposite direction as rears as they are not drive tires, but they do more braking. On a srw, a simple front to back, same side rotation achieves the same goal as above. Plus, if the fronts or rears are wearing faster, it moves the tire with more tread depth to the higher wear position. AND it gets the front tires which are more prone to other wear characteristics being the heavier axle in an empty truck and also subject to steering forces onto the back which serves to "flatten" and correct these deficiencies.
Then of course there's additional treadwear on rwd 1 wheeler peelers sometimes and you have to get that right rear tire moved around to not have excessive overall wear on 1 tire before the others.
Or simply put agian, read the tires. They'll tell you if rotting would benefit and where they should be placed.
โAug-09-2022 09:02 AM
โAug-09-2022 12:02 AM
โAug-08-2022 04:58 PM
โAug-08-2022 01:59 PM
time2roll wrote:Grit dog wrote:Usually balance or weak shocks. Or rotate them to the back and flatten them out.
And tread cupping on the front.
โAug-08-2022 01:09 PM
Grit dog wrote:Usually balance or weak shocks. Or rotate them to the back and flatten them out.
And tread cupping on the front.
โAug-08-2022 12:46 PM
Grit dog wrote:
While I may be inclined to agree with you with respect to rear duals, you are insinuating โallโ wheels and all vehiclesโฆโฆ
All I can say is folks ignorant about tire rotations hopefully donโt read this and believe what you said.
Do some of you just write opposites stuff to watch what ensues or actually believe it?
And bobbolotune donโt be gullible. Your โtire guyโ is a ripoff.
โAug-08-2022 08:01 AM
time2roll wrote:
x 2
โAug-08-2022 08:00 AM
JimK-NY wrote:
I stopped doing routine tire rotations decades ago. I have not had any issues with premature or irregular tire wear. If there is a problem with the suspension, then rotations might just cover it up. Instead get the alignment or other issue fixed.
The idea of routine tire rotations should die along with the 3000 mile oil change.
โAug-08-2022 06:45 AM
JimK-NY wrote:x 2
I stopped doing routine tire rotations decades ago. I have not had any issues with premature or irregular tire wear. If there is a problem with the suspension, then rotations might just cover it up. Instead get the alignment or other issue fixed.
The idea of routine tire rotations should die along with the 3000 mile oil change.
โAug-08-2022 06:15 AM
JimK-NY wrote:
I stopped doing routine tire rotations decades ago. I have not had any issues with premature or irregular tire wear. If there is a problem with the suspension, then rotations might just cover it up. Instead get the alignment or other issue fixed.
The idea of routine tire rotations should die along with the 3000 mile oil change.