mcmonroe
09-05-2004, 11:28
Lets talk about getting a puncture on a rear tire. Lets assume that the puncture is so severe that it requires the tire to be replaced. Common logic says to always replace the tires -- especially the rear ones -- in pairs.
However -- lets say you have a brand new set of tires and 50 miles down the road the rear tires gets a massive puncture. Ahhh -- so perhaps there are points where replacing a single tire makes sense both from a mechanical and economic stand point. :)
I think that was can all agree that if your brand new Corvette/Truck/SUV only has 50 miles on the tires that it would be just fine to only replace one single rear tire if you had a massive puncture.a
Ok -- lets make things more interesting. Lets say the vehicle has 100, 500, 1000, 2,500, 5,000, 10,000, 25,000, 50,000 miles? At what point does the bias start leaning towards replacing both -- versus only one?
I just had such a rear puncture on a set of tires that have 4,900 miles on them and only replaced one. I am one of those Type A obsessives and I am trying to determine whether I am simply being anal with my worries with regards to replacing both tires versus the one.
I measured the tread depth (tires are LT245/75-16 with an overall diameter of 30.5 inches when new) and there about an 1/8 inch difference between the current tires and the new one.
So what should I have done? <huge grin>
:)
Mark
However -- lets say you have a brand new set of tires and 50 miles down the road the rear tires gets a massive puncture. Ahhh -- so perhaps there are points where replacing a single tire makes sense both from a mechanical and economic stand point. :)
I think that was can all agree that if your brand new Corvette/Truck/SUV only has 50 miles on the tires that it would be just fine to only replace one single rear tire if you had a massive puncture.a
Ok -- lets make things more interesting. Lets say the vehicle has 100, 500, 1000, 2,500, 5,000, 10,000, 25,000, 50,000 miles? At what point does the bias start leaning towards replacing both -- versus only one?
I just had such a rear puncture on a set of tires that have 4,900 miles on them and only replaced one. I am one of those Type A obsessives and I am trying to determine whether I am simply being anal with my worries with regards to replacing both tires versus the one.
I measured the tread depth (tires are LT245/75-16 with an overall diameter of 30.5 inches when new) and there about an 1/8 inch difference between the current tires and the new one.
So what should I have done? <huge grin>
:)
Mark