Tires wear and tear
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
Tires wear and tear
Hi everyone!
Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
Thanks
--
Message posted via CarKB.com
http://www.carkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-cars/200704/1
Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
Thanks
--
Message posted via CarKB.com
http://www.carkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-cars/200704/1
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Tires wear and tear
Newhope via CarKB.com wrote:
> Hi everyone!
>
> Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
> 185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
>
> Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
> the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
>
> Thanks
>
do you just "rotate" front to rear? are the driveshafts of unequal
length? if so, its typical for the shorter shaft to wear tires quicker
due to slightly greater torque loading. that will be exaggerated if you
just rotate front to rear. on your rotation, the way to get around this
is to rotate left front to right rear [etc] and left rear to left front
[etc] - that way, each tire gets a shake in the high wear position.
> Hi everyone!
>
> Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
> 185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
>
> Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
> the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
>
> Thanks
>
do you just "rotate" front to rear? are the driveshafts of unequal
length? if so, its typical for the shorter shaft to wear tires quicker
due to slightly greater torque loading. that will be exaggerated if you
just rotate front to rear. on your rotation, the way to get around this
is to rotate left front to right rear [etc] and left rear to left front
[etc] - that way, each tire gets a shake in the high wear position.
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Tires wear and tear
Newhope via CarKB.com wrote:
> Hi everyone!
>
> Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
> 185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
>
> Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
> the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
>
> Thanks
>
------------------------
A: If you've been checking your COLD pressure with the right-hand side
of the car sitting in the sun, the tires on one side may have given you
incorrect readings consistently, so you'd be underinflating them all
along and not knowing it? That's easy to fix.
B: You carry a passenger who is morbidly obese? Not so easy.
'Curly'
> Hi everyone!
>
> Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
> 185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
>
> Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
> the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
>
> Thanks
>
------------------------
A: If you've been checking your COLD pressure with the right-hand side
of the car sitting in the sun, the tires on one side may have given you
incorrect readings consistently, so you'd be underinflating them all
along and not knowing it? That's easy to fix.
B: You carry a passenger who is morbidly obese? Not so easy.
'Curly'
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Tires wear and tear
On 4/15/07 8:59 AM, in article 70be07065e862@uwe, "Newhope via CarKB.com"
<u18620@uwe> wrote:
> Hi everyone!
>
> Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
> 185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
>
> Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
> the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
>
> Thanks
A similar wear experience on my '96 Odyssey was traced to an out of spec toe
adjustment on the right rear wheel. Have you ever had a 4-wheel alignment
performed?
<u18620@uwe> wrote:
> Hi everyone!
>
> Mine is Honda Civic 2005 VP, 30 K miles on its tires. Tires are Dunlop SF 20,
> 185-70-14. I had done the tire rotations regularly as per the book said.
>
> Two tires on passenger side (front and back) are worn faster than other 2 on
> the driver side. Do you have any ideas which cause the problem?
>
> Thanks
A similar wear experience on my '96 Odyssey was traced to an out of spec toe
adjustment on the right rear wheel. Have you ever had a 4-wheel alignment
performed?
#6
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Tires wear and tear
Curly, that makes sense now. I had checked the passenger tires sitting in the
sun and not knowing about it.
motsco_ wrote:
>> Hi everyone!
>>
>[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>>
>> Thanks
>
>------------------------
>
>A: If you've been checking your COLD pressure with the right-hand side
>of the car sitting in the sun, the tires on one side may have given you
>incorrect readings consistently, so you'd be underinflating them all
>along and not knowing it? That's easy to fix.
>
>B: You carry a passenger who is morbidly obese? Not so easy.
>
>'Curly'
--
Message posted via CarKB.com
http://www.carkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-cars/200704/1
sun and not knowing about it.
motsco_ wrote:
>> Hi everyone!
>>
>[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>>
>> Thanks
>
>------------------------
>
>A: If you've been checking your COLD pressure with the right-hand side
>of the car sitting in the sun, the tires on one side may have given you
>incorrect readings consistently, so you'd be underinflating them all
>along and not knowing it? That's easy to fix.
>
>B: You carry a passenger who is morbidly obese? Not so easy.
>
>'Curly'
--
Message posted via CarKB.com
http://www.carkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-cars/200704/1
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
honda video
Honda Videos
0
04-18-2008 10:35 PM
Honda Mailing List
4
05-04-2006 04:36 PM
Honda Mailing List
2
05-04-2006 04:36 PM
Honda Mailing List
0
05-04-2006 03:01 PM
Dan Kuechle
Hyundai Mailing List
7
08-06-2004 12:37 PM
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)