shortylickens
No Lifer
- Jul 15, 2003
- 80,287
- 17,082
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As a matter of course I have my tires balanced the same time I rotate them. It only costs a little extra.
Or do they just rotate the tires only (the rubber tube)?
If latter is true, the dealership forgot or scammed me, because the rims haven't changed position (easy to tell with certain scratches).
If your driving FWD It's just giving away money to not do it, the fronts must drive+steer+bear more weight. Go ahead and not rotate but you will soon be buying 2 new ones for the front instead of extending the life of all four by rotating..
? I've never owned a car with rims (mine are steel with cover). It's my gf's car.
I'm sure they change with rims, but just wanted to make sure before I rage at them.
That's what happens anyway. Rotating tires doesn't magically make them all last longer. The choice is buying two tires twice, or four tires all at once. There's a few caveats in there depending on how broke you are, and your tolerance for unsafe tires, but assuming tires get replaced when needed, rotating won't decrease the cost of owning tires.
That's not really necessary so long as you periodically purge and refill your tires with fresh air. Most garages don't talk about this service but if you tip the mechanic an extra ten spot that should cover it.
That's what happens anyway. Rotating tires doesn't magically make them all last longer. The choice is buying two tires twice, or four tires all at once. There's a few caveats in there depending on how broke you are, and your tolerance for unsafe tires, but assuming tires get replaced when needed, rotating won't decrease the cost of owning tires.
//Smartass Remark Inbound//
It would be impossible to change the "rims" any way you look at it, unless it was a machine shop with the skill & ability to cut the "rim" off the wheel & reweld/ refinish the wheel.
The rim is the outside edge of the WHEEL, not an assembly in and of itself.
Tire mounts on wheel, rim is the outside edge of the wheel.
I would like to find the hood rat that coined the word "Rim" to describe the wheel, I'd kick his ass so hard he would have to wipe his nose after a bowel movement!
(Yeah, yeah, us Fricken' engineers & our proper use of terminology!)
Tire rotation isn't really necessary. It balances the wear over all four tires, but that's not a big concern. Look at the tread. If the wear's similar from front to back, it doesn't matter if they rotated them or not.
It can be. An alignment almost never gets all the settings symmetrical, and sometimes the route you take also affects wear. For example, I take many more high-speed right turns than I do left turns, so the left side could potentially wear slightly quicker.Tire rotation isn't really necessary. It balances the wear over all four tires, but that's not a big concern. Look at the tread. If the wear's similar from front to back, it doesn't matter if they rotated them or not.
I hope the OP did not pay extra to get his tires filled with nitrogen.![]()
Nitrogen is great in the winter. Keeps your psi constant in really cold weather.
Nitrogen is great in the winter. Keeps your psi constant in really cold weather.
my tires lose about 2 lbs a year. pretty traumatic to keep up on that. it doesnt even matter because the day you check them and one of them is at 15lbs, you realize why you check them regularly and if you dont the nitrogen will not save you.
My old tires were the same way.I do not believe 2psi a year for even a second. More like 2psi a month, unless you're running tires that have some kind of ultra-super-effective coating on the inside.
That's nonsense. It might be a good policy to live by to encourage learning, but there are indeed stupid questions.
Nitrogen is great in the winter. Keeps your psi constant in really cold weather.
