
Anyone else done the biannual swap yet?
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Yeah, what a weekend, I'm f*cking knackered, we met Jim & Barbara this time and she wanted to 'experiment' with some new gear butDaiRees wrote:
Anyone else done the biannual swap yet?
Hello, no I haven't swapped the tyres yet but thinking I will next week once this dramatic* blizzard* passes.DaiRees wrote:I know it's still a bit chilly but I had a bit of a quiet weekend so changed them over on Saturday. Love the look of my 18s![]()
Anyone else done the biannual swap yet?
Welly wrote:Yeah, what a weekend, I'm f*cking knackered, we met Jim & Barbara this time and she wanted to 'experiment' with some new gear butDaiRees wrote:
Anyone else done the biannual swap yet?
Oh sh*t wrong Forum.
Welly wrote:I MUST find a set of 16 steelies this year if its the last thing I do.
I'm also faced with calling in the mobile man with his turny-roundy Fischer Price wheel balancing machine
Pete Townshend wrote:Won't Get Balanced Again
He'll be working in the street
With my alloys at his feet
And the dustcaps that I detailed will be gone.![]()
I've had the same experience, changing over last week from Michelin Alpin winters to Hankook Kinergy summers. Everything just feels 'tighter' and more composed on the summers. If you look at the tread patterns, it's obvious why this is. The winters have loads of smaller contact surfaces with lots of siping between them, compared to the big wide contact surfaces on the summers. Combined with a softer rubber compound, they will definitely squirm more under load.Welly wrote:Last Thursday I parted with yet another £68.00 and had the Summers put back on. What a transformation in the handling/feel! I'm wondering if the Winters have gone all weird, there's plenty of tread on them but they're really 'squirmy' on the road.
Personally, I think it's wrong to put the best treads on the rear of a front wheel drive car. You will end up skewing the wear even more to the fronts, and thus have to replace them much more often than the rears. The best method I've found is to always change your wheels front to rear when switching to and from the winter wheels. Unless you do crazy yearly mileage or go all boy-racer on your poor front tyres, the wear difference will stay within ~1mm. This way, you can replace all four tyres at the same time, and always have equal tyres front and rear, with the same model tyre, same wear and same age (which is more important than most people think). Predictable handling is so much more important than the purely imagined benefits of keeping old tyres on the rear because they have more tread depth.I got the chap to put the bestest treads on the rears, to which I received a 'Man Nod' of approval. Strangely despite my car's reputation for shredding front tyres every 15 mins I manage to get at least 15K out of mine but then I'm very easy on them and keep the alignment right.
I can't stand half-assed balancing. Shaky steering wheel at motorway speeds is a great indicator of a lazy tyre fitter (or suspension problems).Anyhoo I think the mobile tyre man now realises I'm a fussy git and cranked up his whizzy-roundy balancer real good this time as they appear to be perfect.
A set of steelies for the winter tyres, a cheap "2 ton" hydraulic jack and ~30 minutes two times/year is so much better than paying ripoff prices at the local wheel storage/changing shops.I MUST get a set of 16" steelies this year. I reckon I could still sell my 17" Winters to someone on the Volvo Forum of doom.
Yes, but you'll have significantly older tyres, maybe even a completely differente make or model on the rear. And all things being equal, you'll spend the same amount total on tyres, just a bit more spread out. I guess this could be easier on some wallets, but personally I prefer to save up just a little bit and have four equally good (and predictable!) tyres on my car at all times.Welly wrote:My thoughts on tyre rotation are that I'd rather leave the rears where they are and wear the fronts out, this way you'll only have 2 x tyres to buy mostly and the rears will be ok. The risk is that at some point you will have 4 x worn tyres on the car.
The argument is that understeer is more controllable than oversteer, which I disagree with. For anyone with even the slightest bit of driving skill, oversteer is so much easier to control, especially in a front wheel drive car, where you literally just have to steer into the slide and either clutch in (if you're inexperienced or drive something with ESP) or drive it out with the throttle, and then straighten up.There's a school of thought that on a FWD car the handling will be more controlled/predictable with worn fronts but good rears; additionally the car will behave better under braking and suffer less lift-off oversteer with good treads on the back.
I think the 1.6mm limit is EU-wide, it's certainly the same in Denmark. But of course that's the absolute minimum and the recommended minimum depth is 3mm, especially for winter tyres. (That doesn't stop people from running them completely down to nothing sometimes, but whattayagonnado, other than issue fines when you catch them?)Welly wrote:In the UK we're 'allowed' to run tyres down to 1.6mm. Imagine your average motorist rounding a long, wet, bend too fast which tightens quickly with worn rear tyres; as soon as they lift off the gas the rear will go light and could oversteer.....left alone or not corrected properly the car will spin and will have no control over where it's heading. At least with understeer you can see what your about to hit.
Good oneThe general consensus is that FWD understeering cars are 'safer' in the way they handle it's perhaps why the majority of cars are FWD and BMW's and Mercs are driven by expert* drivers who know how to handle. I think if most cars had a tendency to swap ends all the time it'd be chaos out on the roads.
Sounds like when it snowed while I was living in Texas [emoji3] I've never seen so many cars in ditches.KozmoNaut wrote:
It would be hilarious if all cars were RWD and prone to oversteer, though. Wintertime would be 24/7 entertainment, no need to turn on the telly.