A hodge-podge of tyres

mubs

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
4,908
Location
Somewhere in time.
Preamble:

1) Car is 11 years old, 175k miles. Will keep it for at most 9 months, and put a max of 10k miles on it in that time frame.
2) Car will be driven in the city only; including local freeways with speeds up to 65 MPH (I will cut back on my usual 85 MPH speed). When I'm on the freeway, if I don't go 65, I'll be mowed over by S. CA traffic. Car will almost never be used for any trip longer than 25 miles one way (will use wifey's car).
3) Car has one new tyre - rear right (~ 500 miles on it). The other three are bald and I think are structrually weak as well. They are all Michelin MXVs from Costco, about $150 each.
4) Rainy season is coming (it's raining heavily today and will tomorrow as well).
5) Car came with a full size spare that still looks/feels new. It has never been used (never had a flat). Don't remember which make, but pretty sure it's not a Michelin.
6) Considering the limited future life of the car, I want to spend as little as possible. I don't want/need hi-performance or long-life tyres.

Now:

I'd like to put the spare on the rear left; use the best of the three bald tyres as the spare; and put two new cheapie (~ $50 each) tyres on the front. This will mean the two tyres on the front axle are same brand/model, but the two on the rear are different from each other and different from the tyres in the front. There will be three brands / models / treadwear patterns on the car.

Questions:

Is this legal?
Is this safe given the usage patterns outlined above?

Thanks!
 

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
Joined
Jan 23, 2002
Messages
2,890
Location
Illinois, USA
Legal? Sure. There's no law that I've ever heard of that says your tires have to match.

Safe? Safe enough. If the spare is really old it's rubber may have deteriorated some but otherwise what you're planning is fine.

You're taking the correct route by matching front-to-front for the new and putting the used/spare on the rear. That structure is the best as far as wheel alignment & handling are concerned.

You might even want to carry a can of fix-a-flat in case you have something minor enough to avoid having to use the bald spare. Or if you do use it, resign yourself to buying another tire to replace the flat. (Note: Fix-a-flat is not generally recommended but can have it's uses.)
 

Tannin

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Jan 15, 2002
Messages
4,448
Location
Huon Valley, Tasmania
Website
www.redhill.net.au
In general, you are supposed to put your best tyres on the rear, so as to avoid oversteer. But that's crap. Put your best tyres on the front, because the front does most of the steering and almost all of the braking. Just remember that your rear end is likely to step out sideways in the wet and drive accordingly.

Old tyres tend to go hard. So your spare will probably wear forever but not have a lot of grip.

I'd go with your current plan, but I'd look at the spare and make a judgement as to whether it and the near-new MXV are better than the cheapies you are going to put on. If so, I'd put them on the front.

Drive gently and take care.
 

mubs

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
4,908
Location
Somewhere in time.
Thanks everybody, for the sound advice.

Tannin said:
Old tyres tend to go hard.
Yup. The three oldies certainly have. Strangely, the spare looks to be in excellent condition. Maybe because it's been sitting there in the trunk in the wheel well, protected from the elements.

Tannin said:
I'd go with your current plan, but I'd look at the spare and make a judgement as to whether it and the near-new MXV are better than the cheapies you are going to put on. If so, I'd put them on the front.
My reasoning was that it would be better to have the wheels that steered and pulled the car using the same make/model/tread for consistent steering and handling. The cheapies will be new; a domestic, national (instead of international) brand, with probably 30k or 40k treadwear, which is plenty for my situation. It probably won't handle very well, but then I don't drive like an idiot either (my age helps too :)).

Thanks. Ya'll a bunch of swell guys.
 

Stereodude

Not really a
Joined
Jan 22, 2002
Messages
10,865
Location
Michigan
And to think, I just spent $720.00 a few weeks ago on 4 tires after I got a non repairable puncture in the sidewall of 1 tire. The 4 tires were almost to the wear bars, so I just replaced them all.

Maybe 245/40/18 tires weren't such a good idea.
 

Groltz

My demeaning user rank is
Joined
Jan 15, 2002
Messages
1,295
Location
Pierce County, WA
sechs said:
How bald is bald? Many places of minimum tread depth requirements.

Agreed.


Lots of tire stores and wrecking yards keep racks of used tires for sale too. They can be had for dirt cheap with still better remaining tread than the ones you've described, Mubs. Think about it.
 

mubs

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
4,908
Location
Somewhere in time.
I may be borderline with the tread-depth. I have a guage somewhere, I'll have to fish it out. In any case I will be away for a few weeks, so the car won't be used at that time.

Thanks for the tip, Groltz.
 

mubs

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
4,908
Location
Somewhere in time.
I'm mulling changing the OEM tyres (Goodyear Eagle NCT 5) on my new car; they're known to be hard rubber that is noisy and that starts losing grip after 15k kms. I'd like the replacements to be reasonably quiet and have a reasonable life (30k kms+), with grip / handling being top priority. The OEM size is 205/55R16.

Good tyres are imported here and cost a bit, but the added safety would be worth it. Problem, is, these are not available in all sizes. For example, Continental Premium Contact 2 isn't available in the size I want.

I've heard good and bad things about Michelin Primacy LC. It's supposed to be super quiet, helps fuel efficiency and lasts super long (hard rubber). Some say grip in wet conditions is bad. Some have had the tyre fail when hitting a pothole at some speed.

Bridgestone MY01 are supposed to be better in wet conditions, but is noisier and doesn't last as long.

Mixed feedback on the Yokohama A.drive R1 and AVS Decibel.

No idea how the Pirelli P7 is.

Anybody know about these?

Thanks.
 

fb

Storage is cool
Joined
Jan 31, 2003
Messages
728
Location
Östersund, Sweden
I have continental premium contact 5 in that exact dimension. They are pretty good allround tires with excellent grip in the wet, but the sidewalls are too soft for my taste, so they kill most of the fun. I would probably go with the Pirelli P7 or something from Nokian if I was shopping for new tires today. I've driven cars with Pirelli P7 quite a lot a couple of years ago and they aren't bad.
 

mubs

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
4,908
Location
Somewhere in time.
Thanks fb. Continental Premium Contact and Continental Premium Contact 2 are the only two Continental Premium Contact tyres available here.
 
Top