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Fourth gear
Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Seacoast NH Posts: 1,063 | Should 10 year old tires, with good tread, be replaced The 96 that I bought has a set of Bridgestone Eagers that are about 10 years old. However, the car only has 41K on it and is on its third set of tires according to the records that I have. So the Bridgestones probably have fewer than 10,000 miles on them. I think I've read that older tires should be replaced and these don't seem as sticky as I'd like. I only drive the car in the summer (well three season) and don't do any autox (yet). But I like to drive and don't baby the car. I've pretty much convinced myself to get a set of Michelin Pilot Exaltos but I hate the idea of throwing away tires with lots of tread left. But if the tires aren't safe I don't want to be driving on them. Should older tires be replaced (10 years or more)? __________________ | ||
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Third gear
Join Date: Jul 2009 Location: florida Posts: 313 | Absolutely should be replaced!..A couple of weeks in ICU would cost a whole lot more..lol. | ||
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Second gear
Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: rowlett, tx Posts: 208 | You will have ZERO grip on wet pavement. I bought a set of NB wheels with old tires with deep tread and ended up doing a 360 on a highway ramp, popped the entire car over a curb, ruined a new to me NB wheel, bent my lower control arm bolt and paid a mechanic to fix. I hope that answers your question. You cannot get a new set of tires on the car quick enough! __________________ | ||
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Fourth gear
Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Seacoast NH Posts: 1,063 | Thank you, I'll replace them; I have to buy the Michelins tomorrow to get the rebate. It's not going to be raining and I'll take it easy on the way. June 2003 is the date of manufacture. __________________ | ||
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Third gear
Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: USA Posts: 630 | sell the old tires to a drifter when you get your new ones __________________ | ||
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Fifth gear
Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Tualatin, Oregon Posts: 4,554 | ^^^I do this to all of my aged-out sets of tires. __________________ | ||
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Lost my brakes
Join Date: Nov 2009 Location: Driftless Zone Posts: 18,306 | Would you throw out eggs that are four years past their expiration date if the shells still looked intact? __________________ What is straight? A line can be straight, or a street, but the human heart, oh, no, it's curved like a road through mountains. ~Tennessee Williams | ||
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Fourth gear
Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Seacoast NH Posts: 1,063 | Quote: Originally Posted by RubyDoo Would you throw out eggs that are four years past their expiration date if the shells still looked intact? Of course, I'd throw the eggs at you for trolling; there is no expiration date on the tires only a date of manufacture. If there were an expiration date I wouldn't have asked __________________ | ||
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Wheels flew off
Join Date: Nov 1999 Location: Calgary, AB, Canada Posts: 35,839 | Quote: Originally Posted by Jack_B Of course, I'd throw the eggs at you for trolling; there is no expiration date on the tires only a date of manufacture. __________________ | |||
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Sixth Gear
Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: Florida's Space Coast Posts: 7,059 | Take it from 2 people who experienced a blowout at 80mph 2 weeks after purchasing their Miata. REPLACE The tires you mention! Our tires looked BEAUTIFUL.... and were later found to be dangerous as heck. They were 10yrs old. o, forgot to mention the second blowout about 5mi later. __________________ 1993 "Alfred" | ||
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Fourth gear
Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Seacoast NH Posts: 1,063 | Thanks everyone I'll try not to think about what could have happened (I hope I make it to the garage) __________________ | ||
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Fifth gear
Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: dc metro Posts: 2,846 | Quote: Originally Posted by Jack_B there is no expiration date on the tires only a date of manufacture. If there were an expiration date I wouldn't have asked The reason there isn't an expiration date is because there are too many uncontrolled factors that determine when a tire is well and truly expired. A tire left in a dark room filled with argon at 40% relative humidity and 60F will last a really long time. A tire left to bake in the sun in Death Valley, and then run over loaded and under inflated and over rough terrain will expire much sooner. Studies have been done by well meaning people. They are not conclusive by any means but they offer some good generalizations. I would consider any tire >6 years old to be expired regardless of tread depth. But I place a high value on safety and I can afford to replace tires when I want to. //blog.tirerack.com/blog/hunter...span-of-a-tire //www.nhtsa.gov/Research/Vehicl...8VRTC%29/Tires | ||
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Fifth gear
Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: NE Louisiana Posts: 2,239 | I have several cars that have "dated" tires and only run them at low speeds on an occasional basis. These unregistered vehicles will get new tires when they are road worthy/ready. Good question that all should contemplate, as Safety is priceless! | ||
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Sixth Gear
Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Beside the Orange Curtain Posts: 9,939 | Five or six years sounds good regardless of adequate tread depth for a daily driver or weekend ride, not that any tire wouldn't be worn out after that long on the road. Like was stated, you could probably go longer with your climate controlled garage queen but then you're certainly not pushing those tires are you.
__________________ "You crossed the finish line. Won the race, but lost your mind. Was it worth it after all?" � Lazlo Bane | ||
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Fifth gear
Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Long Island, NY Posts: 2,690 | Here's what TireRack has to say on Tire aging: Nothing Lasts Forever...and Tires Are No Exception The synopsis is :"Our experience has been that when properly stored and cared for, most street tires have a useful life in service of between six to ten years. ". __________________ | ||
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License revoked
Join Date: Sep 2012 Location: Delta BC Posts: 12,650 | When I sold my 1951 Ford Prefect to a mad gentleman last year, included in the spares were two tires, both original on rims, both with air in them (don't know if the air was original). My rule with tires is simple, do not compromise. | ||
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Lost my brakes
Join Date: Nov 2009 Location: Driftless Zone Posts: 18,306 | My point about eggs is that you can't tell their condition by looking at them ... kinda like tires. We are quite sure that old eggs that look fine should be tossed, but we hate the idea of tossing tires that look fine. To your credit, you are willing to replace yours and came here to ask, so I apologize if my example sounded like a personal attack. Eggs can last for widely varying amounts of time too. The expiration date on them is not nearly as exact as on other foods, like milk. Four years beyond the recommended date would be quite foolish, of course. The reason they have a recommended date instead of a came-out-of-the-chicken date is that nearly nobody, myself included, knows how long they ought to last in normal prudent storage. Like tires ... few are aware of the six-year standard, or even that there is a date to be found on the tire. I predict that tires will soon bear a "replace by" date for the same reason. Except count on it to be more conservative than the six-year standard lest tiremakers be sued by rockheads driving sketchy tires and saying "they weren't expired yet." Doh. As if I should also drink new milk that sat in the car all day. At least the tiremakers could make the manufacture date clear instead of an arcane code. __________________ What is straight? A line can be straight, or a street, but the human heart, oh, no, it's curved like a road through mountains. ~Tennessee Williams | ||
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