buckwild27
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2024
- Posts
- 221
- Reaction score
- 444
A safe bet for most tires is 6000 miles. Except for cooper's the ones I had need rotated every 3000 miles.
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
You're right about that!If you follow the oil life monitor, the tires need to be rotated much more often than that.
This right here…… spot in…Not to mention those stock tires are the junkiest tires available. They should be gotten rid of at the first moment. Tell the dealer that you want these tires replaced or you won't buy it. It's the first thing you'll do if you do buy it.
Mine are doing the same thing on the edges. 2022 Tahoe with 41k miles on it. From what I've read, those Bridgestone Alenza tires are trash and wear quickly. I rotate frequently and my driving habits didn't create the cracking. I'm replacing soon.Hey,
has anyone an idea what might have caused the tires to wire out unevenly? Those are the 2 rear tires. Front looks like normal but back is much more worn out. Not just on the sides but tire tread overall.
Is this an alignment issue or could it be something else? Brake calipers are pretty rusty but brakes seem to work completely fine. Can’t tell any difference.
It’s a used Escalade I’m interested in purchasing it. Thanks
When i’m at the track (in the race car, not the tahoe, haha) I can get that same pattern if I scrub the tire too hard and overheat the rubber. I think it’s called graining. I would say that is indicative of a previous test drive peeling out around a corner more than of anything else. As others have said the tires have dry rot anyways so you’ll want to replace anyways. As for the rear of the Tahoe, it’s a solid axle so there isn’t any camber adjustment to be had.Looks like toe-in which means the tire are scrubbing on the road surface you may also have to much positive camber. You need an alignment!