- Feb 26, 2006
- 66,165
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I'm gonna vent.
I'm long past doing my own wrenching...too old, too busted up. (which pisses me off because I used to do this stuff regularly...for work, for my self, and for friends...I KNOW HOW to do it, I just physically CAN'T.)
The last time I had the oil changed in my 2019 F150 at the Ford dealership, they advised me that my rear brake pads were down to about 30%. I took the truck in to Les Schwab Tires for a brake inspection earlier today. One side of each pair of pads was about 2mm, the other side, about 4-5mm. Front brakes are fine. 8-9mm. Les Schwab's ALWAYS change the calipers with a brake job. No getting around it with them. Estimated price, (depending on exactly which caliper I opt for...$760 or $860 for both wheels...provided they can just turn the rotors and not replace them. (the mechanic says they look fine.)
<sigh Scratch that part...new rotors are included in the price.
I'm due for tires on the truck. The stock "Goodyear Wrangler All-Terrain Adventure with Kevlar" (horrid tires with even a skiff of snow or on the beach) have just over 40,000 miles on them. I bought the truck new in 2020.
Tire prices have gone up just a skosh...I'm looking at $250 each for crappy tires, up to about $450 each for "premium all-terrain" tires...and, dammit, most of them are made in Thailand or India. (I guess that's slightly better than made in the PRC) There are still a few tire companies who still make tires in the US, but it's hit or miss as to which of their tires are made here...and which are made overseas.
We USUALLY don't get much snow here. In the (almost) 7 years we've lived here, I think 4" of snow is the most we've had at one time...so I really can't justify having a dedicated set of winter/snow tires and wheels...just a decent set of all-terrain tires that will handle a bit of snow from time to time...and not get me stuck driving on the beach
I've been a "Michelin Man" for a couple of decades...all my replacement tires have been one Michelin or another, and they DO make good tires, but none are rated very well for wet or snowy roads. (mediocre at best) I've had a couple of sets of Goodyear on new rigs, one set of some kind of Continental tire on a different one...none were particularly impressive.
I'm still looking. <sigh>
I'm long past doing my own wrenching...too old, too busted up. (which pisses me off because I used to do this stuff regularly...for work, for my self, and for friends...I KNOW HOW to do it, I just physically CAN'T.)
The last time I had the oil changed in my 2019 F150 at the Ford dealership, they advised me that my rear brake pads were down to about 30%. I took the truck in to Les Schwab Tires for a brake inspection earlier today. One side of each pair of pads was about 2mm, the other side, about 4-5mm. Front brakes are fine. 8-9mm. Les Schwab's ALWAYS change the calipers with a brake job. No getting around it with them. Estimated price, (depending on exactly which caliper I opt for...$760 or $860 for both wheels...
I'm due for tires on the truck. The stock "Goodyear Wrangler All-Terrain Adventure with Kevlar" (horrid tires with even a skiff of snow or on the beach) have just over 40,000 miles on them. I bought the truck new in 2020.
Tire prices have gone up just a skosh...I'm looking at $250 each for crappy tires, up to about $450 each for "premium all-terrain" tires...and, dammit, most of them are made in Thailand or India. (I guess that's slightly better than made in the PRC) There are still a few tire companies who still make tires in the US, but it's hit or miss as to which of their tires are made here...and which are made overseas.
We USUALLY don't get much snow here. In the (almost) 7 years we've lived here, I think 4" of snow is the most we've had at one time...so I really can't justify having a dedicated set of winter/snow tires and wheels...just a decent set of all-terrain tires that will handle a bit of snow from time to time...and not get me stuck driving on the beach
I've been a "Michelin Man" for a couple of decades...all my replacement tires have been one Michelin or another, and they DO make good tires, but none are rated very well for wet or snowy roads. (mediocre at best) I've had a couple of sets of Goodyear on new rigs, one set of some kind of Continental tire on a different one...none were particularly impressive.
I'm still looking. <sigh>
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