Mmm, daily driver with 70/30 city/highway use. I guess the load is being distributed on double rear tires of a truck for safety?Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Its more of what it is being used for and how often than a question of what kind of car it is
Originally posted by: Antoneo
Mmm, daily driver with 70/30 city/highway use. I guess the load is being distributed on double rear tires of a truck for safety?Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Its more of what it is being used for and how often than a question of what kind of car it is
Yeah, that's what I meant.Originally posted by: FrustratedUser
Originally posted by: Antoneo
Mmm, daily driver with 70/30 city/highway use. I guess the load is being distributed on double rear tires of a truck for safety?Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Its more of what it is being used for and how often than a question of what kind of car it is
Double tires is used to carry more load.
Originally posted by: FrustratedUser
Originally posted by: Antoneo
Mmm, daily driver with 70/30 city/highway use. I guess the load is being distributed on double rear tires of a truck for safety?Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Its more of what it is being used for and how often than a question of what kind of car it is
Double tires is used to carry more load.
They typically do have a higher payload. It used to be that all of the 1 ton trucks (well, the real ones, not the spec-cheating Toyotas) had dually axles. I think tire tech's come far enough that the load range needed for a SRA to be a 1 ton safely is around now where it didn't used to be.Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Actually, most duallys have a slightly lower tow rating than their non-dual rear wheel counterparts. The dual rear wheels makes for a much more stable towing platform though and that is why people buy them.
Originally posted by: Preyhunter
I think it's more a question of the steering characteristics of the vehicle. Understeer (the majority of factory vehicles) creates more load on the front of a vehicle, causing it to "plow" through a corner. Oversteer puts more stress on the traction of the rear tires, causing a spinout with the rear coming around on you in instances where the applied force is greater than the traction provided by the tires. Either of these conditions may exist regardless of whether the vehicle is a FWD or RWD. Don't forget that proper tire inflation is also a factor.
To answer the OP's question, the front tires wear faster the majority of the time.
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
They typically do have a higher payload. It used to be that all of the 1 ton trucks (well, the real ones, not the spec-cheating Toyotas) had dually axles. I think tire tech's come far enough that the load range needed for a SRA to be a 1 ton safely is around now where it didn't used to be.Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Actually, most duallys have a slightly lower tow rating than their non-dual rear wheel counterparts. The dual rear wheels makes for a much more stable towing platform though and that is why people buy them.
As far as towing stability, when you got twice as much tire touching the ground, and a wider wheelbase, convincing that 10,000+ LB trailer to slow down and change direction as you're heading down a steep slope (ie: Tahoe basin over US-50) becomes a bit easier to do. You gotta drive them like you're always towing though, it's easy to forget about the extra width.
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
That's more dependant on the suspension though isn't it? I didn't comment on payload because I wasn't sure about that. I have researched the 1 ton trucks though for towing capacity so I decided to comment on that. 🙂
I've never driven a dual axle truck. I've driven a 26' single axle moving van and a couple 3/4 ton pickup trucks but that's about it.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Preyhunter
I think it's more a question of the steering characteristics of the vehicle. Understeer (the majority of factory vehicles) creates more load on the front of a vehicle, causing it to "plow" through a corner. Oversteer puts more stress on the traction of the rear tires, causing a spinout with the rear coming around on you in instances where the applied force is greater than the traction provided by the tires. Either of these conditions may exist regardless of whether the vehicle is a FWD or RWD. Don't forget that proper tire inflation is also a factor.
To answer the OP's question, the front tires wear faster the majority of the time.
Actually, the second post in this thread summed it up quite accurately.
I have 2 cars, one is FWD, one is RWD. They both have understeer. The drive tires wear out fastest by far.
Originally posted by: Preyhunter
If you take what would be considered "normal", such as not shooting off the line at lights and stop signs, following proper braking distance recommendations, having a properly adjusted brake system, properly inflated tires, etc, physics will take care of the rest.
Originally posted by: Fmr12B
RWD - Rear tires
FWD - Front Tires
AWD (cars)- Front tires as most AWD systems use the front wheels as the primary drive axle s its usualy a 70-30 drive split Front to Rear