A&Q about 350Z
Q:
I ecently got one of my tires slashed, and I went to a tire shop to have it replace, but they didnt have the exact tire i needed. just like the other 3. They said that they would put a tire almost exactly identical to the one i really neede, same specs everything, but the only difference is the tread design. is this bad for my vehicle? please let me know. thanks guys
A:
Hello
Replacing just one tire can be bad if: you have a all wheel drive vehical, you put on a tire that is taller or shorter than the others...ie,..dont' run the donut on the drive wheels, it will make your dif work over time.
I don't think you will have a probem
What type of car?
Regards
Dan
A:
Any tire shop that sells you a tyre that puts different tread patterns, tyre brands, types etc, on opposite sides of the same axle should not be in business.
On a 2wd vechile you can usualy get away with running different tyres front and back, although its not recomended.
On a 4wd vechile all 4 tyres should be of the same type, and of similar wear levels.
But you should never mix tyres across an axle. Since all tyres have slightly different grip levels you effectivly unballance the car.
Under brake is where it could be most dangerous, one tyre will have more grip than the other, causing un-even braking performance, which can easily turn the car in one direction, causing loss of control and possibly a spin.
A:
LeSabre i have a 07 Civic LX coupe. and thanks for your put back guys. i really appreciate it.
A:
Since your cars is so new, check around different tyre shops and dealers.
Often several will have the same tyres that have been traded for something with more bling.
A:
Just my 2 cents... putting on a different tire like you described (same service type, different brand) is no different than putting on a brand new tire of the exact same brand while leaving the others partially worn.
I've seen and driven cars with three or four different brands of tire, all the same size. Its ugly and a lazy way of doing things but it works fine.
The main concern is different size. Between tires of the same size (even in the same brand) there are differences in section width, tread width, overall diameter, etc. A Michelin touring tire that is 215/60/15 has slightly different dimensions than a Michelin performance tire of 215/60/15. BUT, its no different than using the exact same tire where three are half-worn and one is brand new. Its also quite possible that since the three good tires on your car were manufactured, the specs or tolerances have changed, or even more consequential is that its possible that the company who makes the carcass or supplies the materials has changed five times since then. Your new tire of the exact same brand and model might be just as different as another name.
If you're anal or picky, replace it with the same exact tire... but it won't do any damage to replace it with a different one.
I might suggest checking the specs of both on the tire manufacturer's website. Avoid tires that are obviously very different in specification.
A:
yea i went to a different tire shop, they said that all the tires were the same size, not sure about with but everthing matched size wise. they said that tread design was just for looks. the only thing that would be bad for my car is if they were different size. thanks guys for your put back
A:
this is true, but not really a problem in the real world.
lots of people drive around with underinflated tires. this can cause a much greater variation in size than your example if one tire is 10 psi low and the other three are fine. (not that you had a bad example or anything)
most ECUs are designed to compensate within a certain amount of tire size for ABS and Traction Control ect...
you should try to get identical tires and replace all tires in pairs, but the reality is that sometimes you dont have the money to pay for 4 new tires at one time.
i'll probly get flamed for saying this, but as long as the tire is the same brand, same size and same model, the tread pattern is not a big deal in most cases.
A:
Ever had to do an emergancy stop in a car with 3 different tyres on it?
Or make a fast swerve to aviod something, like a person or another car?
The car will behave unpredicably, and dangerously, Iv been there, tried that.
A:
hahaha.. well in my situation all 3 are the same but 1. and all 4 of them are made by the same brand. i dunno what to do. ive heard mix opinions about it. why can't people just not be gay and slash tires.
A:
Usually if tread patterns are similar enough, its not a big deal, emergency stops and swerves included. dont quote me on this, but i believe tire shops have reference guides for tread patterns.
A:
Yes, but we're talking about a car with 4-channel ABS and its a civic... the tires are hardly the limiting factor in its handling.
However this is a good example of how different continents view different aspects of a car.
A:
well, in wonderfully litigation happy US of A, we are dictated exactly what we can and cannot do as a business, by the court systems and their joy in putting the screws to companies with frivolous lawsuits.
Now a days, we can only use one type of tire patch, thanks to lawsuits. We can not sell any less than 4 snow tires for a car due to law suits. And of course, we can't sell less than 4 tires for a AWD car, and no less than 2 tires to a posi rear/front driven car/truck.
Of course....we can recommend all we want, but the end result is, no matter what we "suggest", if we actually ALLOW them to talk us out of our hard-line suggestion, we must be the bad guys.
BTW moppie, you should work the front counter of a tire store some time, and try the hard nose line for a couple days. After you get ripped up one side and down the other, you would rethink your strategy IMO. There are a lot of cheap ass Mo-Fo's out there, and they will see such tactics as an attempt to steal money from them, and they would tell you such, for several hours, and all the other customers in the front office too.
People are loopy in general, IMO.
But anway, to answer the original question, its not really a big deal. If you really want to be anal, you could buy an original model tire, and take it to a tire shop that is capable of cutting down a tire to get the same tread depth....but this is pretty overkill. It really depends on what the actual tread depth (total diameter) is between the two tires. If we're talking less than 3/32", and the traction quality is simular, I definitely wouldn't worry about it.
If you're talking 6/32" difference, and/or the traction qualities are different, I would personally just replace 2 tires as a set. But thats me.
A:
whats wrong with selling two show tires.
if you have FWD 2 is all you need in most cases.
if you have RWD 4 is better, but 2 is fine too.
A:
The courts have decided that poor unintelligent people that don't know how to operate a vehicle in the snow, can't be expected to operate a vehicle that has 2 tires that grip well in the snow, and two tires that don't, causing sub-optimal braking.
These poor souls, wrongfully sold such a tire combo were completely caught by surprise when they pushed the pedal thingy that is supposed to stop the vehicle, and instead of it stopping in a nice safe manner, caused a set of wheels to lock and the vehicle "lost control" suddenly.
It must of been the tires fault, and thereby, the shop that sold them the tires. So I've heard.