SacramentoMike
Not Safe For Work
With all the expertise around here, figgered this was a good place to ask. My wife took her Subaru Forester in for a random scheduled service yesterday and they told her she has a nail or something in one of the tires. There has to be at least 20,000 miles left on that set of tires, but they're recommending she replace all four tires! :weirdsmiley: Tread depth is at 7/32" now, and most state government inspections fail tires at 2/32nd. The dealer recommends replacing at 5/32".
Is it possible they just like to sell tires in sets of four? An internet search raises some questions, like having one newer tire could have some harmful effect on the all-wheel drive function (somehow. Don't know how, but I don't know anything about this, period.) The tire with the nail has a very slow leak right now, would last a week or more before needing a couple or three pounds of air, but they (whoever "they" are) say it could cause a sudden failure. Not good. I don't mind buying the one, but replacing 3 good tires?? So the wife talked to the dealership, and they said they could somehow shave a new tire to bring it equal to the other 3. Odd thought.
But as I said, I don't know, and mainly, it's her car and she's going to want to be comfortable. I'd buy one and drive on, myself, but she's not quite ready to do that. What do you tire experts think?
Is it possible they just like to sell tires in sets of four? An internet search raises some questions, like having one newer tire could have some harmful effect on the all-wheel drive function (somehow. Don't know how, but I don't know anything about this, period.) The tire with the nail has a very slow leak right now, would last a week or more before needing a couple or three pounds of air, but they (whoever "they" are) say it could cause a sudden failure. Not good. I don't mind buying the one, but replacing 3 good tires?? So the wife talked to the dealership, and they said they could somehow shave a new tire to bring it equal to the other 3. Odd thought.
But as I said, I don't know, and mainly, it's her car and she's going to want to be comfortable. I'd buy one and drive on, myself, but she's not quite ready to do that. What do you tire experts think?