FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT TYRES
Jonathan Langsdorf has been writing financial, investment and trading articles and blogs since 2007. His work has appeared online at Seeking Alpha, Marketwatch.com and various other websites. Langsdorf has a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Tires are constructed from materials such as rubber and fabric that lose their strength and flexibility over time. Often it is not possible to determine through visual inspection whether a tire is too old or dangerous. Tires are not manufactured with an expiration date, but it is possible to figure out if a tire is too old to use safely.
Instructions
- Look for the tire identification number branded in the sidewall of the tire. These ID number starts with the letters DOT followed by a combination of 10 to 12 letters and numbers. If you see DOT plus just a few letters or numbers, the full ID number is on the other side of the tire.
- Note whether the last part of the ID number consists of three or four digits. If you see just three numbers, the tire was manufactured before the year 2000; jump to Step 5
- Decode the tire manufacture date. The four-digit number provides the week and year the tire was manufactured. For example, if the digits are 4308, the tire was manufactured in the 43rd week of 2008.
- Determine the age of the tire by subtracting the date of manufacture from the current date. Remember that a year has 52 weeks and each month is approximately 4.3 weeks long.
- Properly dispose of any overage tires. Consumer safety experts say a tire over 6 years old is too old to use safely.
- Tire manufacturers usually provide a 5-year warranty for their tires. If a tire is less than 5 years old, has usable tread and develops a problem, the warranty will cover some of the replacement cost.
- Motor homes and other vehicles that are driven few miles per year are prone to having overage tires with good tread remaining.
- Old tires can fail catastrophically, resulting in loss of vehicle control and possible injury or death. It is unsafe to drive on any tire more than 6 years old
- Check with your local government or a tire store for proper disposal of old tires. Old tires are a serious environmental issue.
Tips & Warnings
It turns out we’re replacing our tires a lot sooner than we should be. By Zach Bowman
Chances are, there’s some sourceless bit of knowledge rattling around in your head. You don’t know how it got there or where it came from, but you believe it. Maybe your convictions on tire life falls into that category. We’ve always held that that our favorite round rubber bits had a use life of about two years before age had a serious negative impact on performance. Turns out, we were wrong. Way wrong.
Woody Rodgers, a tire product information specialist, has been with Tire Rack for sixteen years, and he says that given proper storage and care, tires can last you up to a decade.
“I won’t say a tire has the shelf life of gravel,” Rodgers said, “but it’s close to that.”
When properly stored in a climate controlled warehouse, tires have an almost unlimited shelf life, and once they’re on the road, proper care can add many years to a tire’s life.
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“In general, we see six years of service with no more than 10 years of total life since manufacture.”
Rodgers calls this the 6 or 10 rule, and those two numbers are important. In this case, service is any time the tire is on the vehicle, in use, or stored outside. Exposure to ozone or UV rays shortens that lifespan, as do wide swings in temperature.
Of course, that all depends on where you live and how you drive.
“The reality is, service life can vary so much from one driver to another and one part of the country to another, that it’s really difficult to say that it’s X [years],” Rodgers said.
Instead of marking a date on your calendar, Rodgers recommends inspecting and maintaining your tires every month. Keep an eye out for cracks in the sidewall caused by either sun exposure or under inflation, and monitor your tread depth. Most of us rely on the wear bars on the tires themselves, or the ancient penny test to tell us when it’s time to swap shoes, but Rodgers says that’s a problem.
Wear bars usually present themselves at 2/32 tread depth, which is fine for dry climates like Los Angeles or Phoenix, but not so great for parts of the country that see regular rain. Instead, 4/32 of tread depth is the minimum safe threshold for evacuating water from beneath the tire and reducing the chance of hydroplaning. How do you measure 4/32 without a depth gauge? Rodgers says if you can stick a quarter in the tread and not see the top of Washington’s head, you’re in good shape. If you can, it’s time for new rubber.
Likewise, snow and all-season tires require even more depth to effectively evacuate snow and slush: about 6/32.
Then there’s inflation. Rodgers says tires naturally loose about 1 psi per month on average, and lose or gain 1 psi for every 10 degree drop or increase in ambient temperature. Those changes require regular monitoring and adjustment, and your vehicle’s tire pressure monitoring system may not be up to the task.
Most systems are calibrated to alert the driver about a low tire only after the pressure has dropped below 75 percent of the recommended figure. Rodgers says that’s well past the point of damaging the tire and shortening its life, to say nothing of sucking down your fuel economy. For the best reading, check your tire pressures with a good gauge in the cool ambient air of the morning – not in your garage.
And what about storage? Rodgers says that for most street tires, it doesn’t matter whether they’re stacked on the sidewall or stood up on their tread, mounted or unmounted. As long as your tires are out of sunlight, away from ozone, and in an environment with a stable temperature, you’re good to go.
It’s never felt so good to be so wrong.
From: Road & Track