Originally posted by: mchammer
I have an '89 Ford Taurus. My rear tires have a lot of tread but they are 5 years old. I want to put them on the front because the front tires are getting low. Does the age of a tire affect its performance at all?
Originally posted by: Kipper
Dry-rot...
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: mchammer
I have an '89 Ford Taurus. My rear tires have a lot of tread but they are 5 years old. I want to put them on the front because the front tires are getting low. Does the age of a tire affect its performance at all?
Yes, the rubber gets hard.
Originally posted by: ElFenix
newer tires go on the rear of fwd cars
Originally posted by: mchammer
Originally posted by: ElFenix
newer tires go on the rear of fwd cars
But the fronts do most of the work, no?
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: mchammer
Originally posted by: ElFenix
newer tires go on the rear of fwd cars
But the fronts do most of the work, no?
Yes, but if one set of tires is going to lose traction, the car's behavior is much easier to predict if it's the FRONT set.
Originally posted by: dug777
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: mchammer
Originally posted by: ElFenix
newer tires go on the rear of fwd cars
But the fronts do most of the work, no?
Yes, but if one set of tires is going to lose traction, the car's behavior is much easier to predict if it's the FRONT set.
i'd be rather more concerned if i had a blowout at the front that the back personally...:Q
Originally posted by: Rallispec
i've heard the argument towards putting the new tires at the back -- however thier has always been one point that never made sense to me -- and that is during heavy braking.
when you brake heavily and all that weight is transferred to the front of your car, you want the most traction you can get at those front tires to keep you from skidding and losing control. (especially in emergency, accident avoidance type situations)
I can really only see the better tires being better at the rear when you're doing more aggressive driving in wet (or otherwise inclimate situations) -- in which case you shouldnt be driving hard enough to lose control in the first place (if you were smart and knew you had 2 bad tires up front)
seems to me that if i knew i had 2 bad tires - id rather play safe and slow on wet curvy roads and not worry about sliding out of control -- and know that should i need to slam on my brakes i've got the traction up front to stop the car.
anyone care to tell me why i'm wrong?
Originally posted by: cavemanmoron
I think if you let the tires sit,not being used is worse,
rotate at least every 20,000 miles for best tread life.
If the tires are over 10 years old,I would watch them Very carefully,
but 5 years should be ok.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: mchammer
I have an '89 Ford Taurus. My rear tires have a lot of tread but they are 5 years old. I want to put them on the front because the front tires are getting low. Does the age of a tire affect its performance at all?
Yes, the rubber gets hard.
Your concern is wrong though. A blowout at the rear can throw a car into oversteer, causing a spin. A blowout at the front will only cause understeer, a much safer and more predictable condition.Originally posted by: dug777
i'd be rather more concerned if i had a blowout at the front that the back personally...:Q
Weight transfer to the front tires increases traction immensely. So even marginal tires on the front have much better traction when braking.Originally posted by: Rallispec
when you brake heavily and all that weight is transferred to the front of your car, you want the most traction you can get at those front tires to keep you from skidding and losing control.