It's a bit like asking how old will somebody live to?
There is a lot of variables. Do you have a particular context?
Anyone have an idea of the " average " life of a car tyre ?
30,000 miles / 3 years ?
It's a bit like asking how old will somebody live to?
There is a lot of variables. Do you have a particular context?
Different cars, different tyres, different drivers etc.
The wife's old ford cougar would in fronts in around 8k, I used to work in a tyre related industry and we often saw vectras dragging rears to 90k miles plus.
I believe it's generally measured in the trade proportionally using the 'length of a piece of string' scale - just half it
Dragging rears to 90k plus ?
Wow
Totally dependent on driving style and usage I'm afraid. Although there are ratings on tyre for relative treadwear. None of the manufacturers guarantee mileage but only against faulty manufacture/materials.
It will say something like -Treadwear 180 Traction A Temperature B .
Explanation here but it's a relative grading.
https://takemebeyondthehorizon.wordp...eadwear-grade/
Met a 75yr-old at Quickfit who was getting the original tyres renewed on his 15yr-old Toyota...........
I think the new set would probably see him out.
When I took my 125 to get the rears replaced after 11000 miles. I was moaning to the guy behind the desk, his reply....
" yea they eat rear tyres those", they never mentioned that in the brochure..
I’ve managed to scrub my front tyres within 5000 miles so as said above it all depends on the Tyre, the car, the driver and the type of driving.
90,000 miles off a set of Goodrich All Terrain on my 1996 Defender. Only changed them because of sidewall crazing, not lack of tread 🚙
One of my cars had the original tyres on at 35K and had to be replaced due to cracking, not wear! OAP driving!
A lot of factors affect the life of tyres. Car setup up, driving style, weather conditions, road conditions, tyre brand, tyre compound, tyre pressure.... The list goes on. The key factors that the driver can directly influence are the driving style and the tyre pressure.
I've had from 20k up to 40k miles. The front set on my wife's car recently only lasted 5k due to wheel alignment issues.
When I had a company car I used to get 10-15k from a set, Inget about 20k now I have my own car and have to pay for them myself !
Cheers..
Jase
Other than one puncture in April last year I've never bought tyres.
Does that mean I drive like an old man?
3 years from date of manufacture.
Or until they are visibly at the limit.
Whichever comes first.
Rob.
I think I wrote on here last year about the fronts on my old F30 320d - they lasted 83k if I remember correctly. Even the rears lasted over 40k.
In contrast I used to run sticky Yokohamas on a modified golf - was lucky with 5k miles out of those. The contrast is really remarkable given the driver was the same - maybe I grew up a little between the two...
My Volvo XC60 seems to eat them. First set lasted 15,000 miles. Second set have done 13,000 and fronts are borderline already. Heavy car I guess and we live rural so the roads are rough and potholed. Tyres on our other car, a Mini Cooper S, seem to last ages, I’d say 25-30,000 miles.
I get 15,000 - 20,000 miles with Barums on an A4 Avant of mixed driving.
This is what I was thinking. Don't all tyres now have to include a date stamp so you can work it out?
I wouldn't be happy running the same tyres for more than 3 years, even if the tread was good. It's not worth the risk IMO. You wouldn't skip an oil change for 3 years because you only did 5,000 miles a year, would you?
I've done a set or rears on the Noble in an afternoon, whearas the tyres on my current BMW should just make 20k, so somewhere between them
Definitely depends on driving style etc. If you're worried, you prolly need to buy some. And don't go cheap: these things do your steering and braking when all's said and done :)
I don't understand either of these, if the tyre is in good condition why would you change it, my rears are £500+each and only do about 1-2000 miles a year, they do have Kevlar side walls.
Surely with modern synthetic oils the annual change is unnecessary, the only fluids to degrade with time are coolant and brake/clutch fluid
Some manufactures have 2 year intervals but a lot still recommend yearly oil changes which is imo a good thing. My car was 2 years old when it got its first oil change, if it were mine it would have been done at a year however seeing as its leased I'm sticking to the recommendations from the makers. If we're talking modern Diesel engines with dpf then it's even more important to change the oil regularly synthetic or not
A family member just got a Porsche with 21” wheels, I shudder to think how much they will cost to replace and I bet they don’t last long either.
Not sure there are any hard and fast rules on this TBH. Unless the tyres are obviously degraded - i.e. cracked, split etc. it would be difficult to find them "out of date".
Some cars, especially some 4x4s can have tyres last for ages. My Landcruiser has a set that is 6 years old, with 60k miles and they are barely 1/2 worn (they did start with 12mm of tread though!) The rubber is nice and supple too with no cracking etc.
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Last edited by vagabond; 30th September 2017 at 22:23.
FFF! A genuine question - whats the link between modern DPF's and a regular oil change ??
I'm thinking the DPF is emission based so way after the oil based element. If you're DPF is gonna f*** up due to less frequent oil changes, there's surely a badly damaged engine at play ?
Can you explain ? Ta.
On the outside of the tyre is a "sentence" starting with the letters DOT. At the end is a rectangular box shaped moulding containing space for four numbers. The first two numbers are the week of the year and the second two numbers are the year. this tells you when the tyre was manufactured.
for example 0315. 03 is the third week of the year and 15 is the year 2015.
I think I read that six years might be the recommended life of a tyre
I too think that the guidance usually stated is 6 years, but IME a tyre can last a lot longer if not exposed to UV, not allowed to flat spot or run at very low pressures leading to cracking of the side walls etc, etc.
If anyone has something to support the 3 years life mentioned a couple of times above, I would be very interested to see it as that sounds ridiculously short IMO.
Got a BMW e46 318ci, with 330i MV Spokes, tyres last approx 2 years
I was only getting 6000 miles out of a set of fronts on my Range Rover, which I thought was pretty bad.
Mind you, I only get 60 miles (on a good day) out of a set of fronts on my rally car.....