preferred tire rotation pattern

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by who, Jul 15, 2008.

  1. who

    who Guest

    What is the current preferred tire rotation pattern for radial tires?

    My Chrysler owners book and Michelin give the traditional X pattern.
    My tire dealer says definitely front to rear, which he did but that
    means my sidewalls on the curb side take all the wear.

    My tires are about 50% worn.
    TIA
     
    who, Jul 15, 2008
    #1
  2. who

    Bill Putney Guest

    Unless you have *directional* tread pattern tires (which would be
    indicated by a label and arrow showing required direction of rotation on
    the sidewall), you should either move fronts straight back and move the
    rears to the opposite side on the front *OR* move the backs straight
    forward and move the fronts to opposite side on the rear. Choose *one*
    of those two and do that pattern consistently over the life of a given
    set of tires. That way, over the series of rotations that you will give
    them over their life, you maximize the evening out of irregular wear
    patterns, which is the purpose of rotating them (along with reducing
    likelihood of their becoming noisy and/or non-optimum handling). (If
    you think about it, with one of those two patterns, each tire will have
    at least one turn at every position over its life.)

    Your tire dealer is either grossly incompetent *OR* they noticed that
    your tires have directional rotation tread.

    If you've not rotated your tires over the first half of their life, you
    won't gain optimum tread life by starting to rotate at this late date,
    but you will gain something. If they rotate them for free, then it's
    worth doing. If they charge you for it, then it's questionable whether
    you will have a net savings. To really benefit from rotation, it should
    be done every 5000 to 7000 miles. For most people who take decent care
    of their cars, a rule of thumb would be either every oil change or every
    other oil change depending on what you use for the change interval.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 16, 2008
    #2
  3. who

    who Guest

    THX Bill. No my tires aren't directional and I previously have rotated X
    pattern on a regular basis.
    I'll now continue with the X rotation you also recommend.
    The tire dealer obviously confused the directional tire rotation
    recommendation.
     
    who, Jul 18, 2008
    #3
  4. who

    Ron Seiden Guest

    Recently had my van in at WallyWorld for oil change & (free) tire rotation.
    (I always specify the fronts going straight back & the rears crossing going
    forward.) They actually paged me back to the service desk to tell me that
    the tech said all the tires had exactly the same tread depth so did I really
    want to rotate them. I gave the clerk "that look" and told her that the
    tires were like that *because* I got them rotated regularly...
     
    Ron Seiden, Jul 19, 2008
    #4
  5. who

    Bill Putney Guest

    Hah hah! Great story!

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 19, 2008
    #5
  6. who

    Bill Putney Guest

    As long as you realize it's not an X. Only two get crossed to the other
    side, the other two go straight to the other end, no crossing.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 19, 2008
    #6
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