Anyway, cheers for the prompt!
onnzo wrote:Hi Guys,
When replacing tyres on a 4wd cars, do you need to have the same tyres front and rear? Im recal reading with old 4wd systems, you had to replace them all.
I bought a set of 4 18" wheels last time from Tempe/Wheelpower. Got 4 new tyres at the same time as well (about 6 months ago I think?). Anyway, dad was driving my car whilst I was away on holidays and ran over a pothole buckling a rim (and my mum scraped my other car a few days later!). He took it to the tyre shop who said it was gone and the tyre must also have been wrecked too.
Anyway - I have ordered another 2 rims from wheelpower (one for the spare) - I have the old 17" as a current spare which I will get rid of once I get the new rims/tyres.
As for tyres, I will order some from tirerack again and am tossing up between buying 2 or 4 new tyres. what do you guys think? do I need to run the same tyre front and rear?
Mike
Rome_STI wrote:onnzo wrote:Wheels arrived today. I'm very impressed. Ordered at 12pm yesterday, delivered 24 hours later in Melbourne from Sydney. I also picked up the damaged rim. I'm going to make a claim with the council. Getting some pics of the pothole which is about the depth of a tennis ball and then I'll write a letter.
Now to decide on the tyres
I wonder if this is possible in Sydney as I'm sure a few of us would be making claims...
onnzo wrote:Wheels arrived today. I'm very impressed. Ordered at 12pm yesterday, delivered 24 hours later in Melbourne from Sydney. I also picked up the damaged rim. I'm going to make a claim with the council. Getting some pics of the pothole which is about the depth of a tennis ball and then I'll write a letter.
Now to decide on the tyres

imania wrote:I thought the A was for the asymmetric variant, as in a directional tyre? The one without the A is the non directional afaik
imania wrote:I thought the A was for the asymmetric variant, as in a directional tyre? The one without the A is the non directional afaik
mihai wrote:Yea, but as I said, the A has no bearing on the direction of the tyre. Just means that the inside tread is different to the outside tread.
99rex wrote:hi again,just thought id put a pic up showing the tread pattern on some 050A's .
you can see the inner & outer tread patterns are identical as to be a well balanced tyre in either front left,or rear right??
therefore symetrical..i dont want to get into a slang match with anyone (please) i have spoken with bridgestone (sales rep's) directly (my brother owns a tyre shop)
whereas the 050's have a slightly different inner pattern.
thanks guys...


Return to Suspension, Brakes, Wheels and Tyres.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests