- Sep 24, 2008
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When I had my tyre fitted I did ask have you much experience with them , he replied "only to remove them"
Your post is not very specific, what "them" are you referring to?When I had my tyre fitted I did ask have you much experience with them , he replied "only to remove them"
Other customersYour post is not very specific, what "them" are you referring to?
I think it’s still on Tyron bandsI'm sorry Robert but your last two comments don't seem to make any sencse in the context of the thread, Can you explain please?
I'm sorry Robert but your last two comments don't seem to make any sencse in the context of the thread, Can you explain please?
[/QU Sorry about that, as I said before to the mechanic . Have you any experience of Tyron band fitting of which he replied "only the removing them from customers tyres. He did no elaborate to how many persons that had that done. My spare tyre which looks brand new but ages old ,I am having it done so will ask him about how many removed
It would seem, I have come away from the thread, first by telling of the TYRON BANDS and my experience of a tyre which blew out. I do apologise.
What is a pub?No problem, threads do meander at times. A bit like a chat at the pub. Remember those? 👍
I always used to rotate the set of 5 in sequence - the Vauxhalls looked naff as the spare was a black painted steel wheel but I changed to Subaru and then Hyundai which both had a matching alloy spare - now my VW Touareg has a deflated space-saver so nowhere to stow a full-size spare even if I bought one.Still with tyres, was telling my wife about this thread and she came out with this . Why travel with a new tyre in the boot which sometimes never gets used when if you fitted it in turn to another wheel so evening it out. Many years ago I use to change fronts to rears , now wait until worn.
My current Forester only has a space saver but in Oz it comes with a full size alloy. So on my last Forester SJ I bought a brand new Subaru alloy from the importers which although a different pattern wheel met all the dimensional specifications. Being a discontinued line and during stock clearance I only paid £50 plus carriage. It sat in the wheel well but slightly raised the load area floor about half an inch. I shod it with a part worn tyre at 5 mm with similar tread pattern to the four OEM Yokohama tyres. It came into its own when I had a non repairable puncture one bank holiday Sunday near Bangor.I always used to rotate the set of 5 in sequence - the Vauxhalls looked naff as the spare was a black painted steel wheel but I changed to Subaru and then Hyundai which both had a matching alloy spare - now my VW Touareg has a deflated space-saver so nowhere to stow a full-size spare even if I bought one.
Yes my XC 70 space saver was 2 inch smaller on its tyre diameter than the road wheels. Looked very strange when I had to use it when I had a puncture. My Superb estate had a steel full size spare but the steel wheel was one inch smaller than the road wheels although the tyre aspect ratio was higher and rolling radius the same as the four road wheels.On many cars the spare wheel is not the same size as the driven wheels or the tyre on the spare wheel is a different size. Our spare wheel is metal and not an alloy and instead of it being 20" is only 18".
That's a good question. I hope that car manufacturers would most likely be aware of this, and supply a omnidirectional tyre. But of late there have been quite a few space saver spares, or no spare from new.This thread has now got me thinking, I replaced my 4 tyres I think 4 years ago, for Knokian Weatherproofs , which are directional tyres. I still have the original Hankook vectus 2 , full size spare wheel, never had a puncture, now the thing is ?
Without looking any further I think the spare tyre /wheel is non directional, so I can fit it on either side of the car. I would only run this until I got the puncture repaired or tyre replaced.
But I wonder how many cars are fitted with directional tyres as spares.
My Sorento had a normal full size spare identical to road wheels. The XC 70 had space saver non directional. Superb steel wheel full size non directional. Both Subarus had/have non directional space saver. All aforementioned cars had non directional road tyres from new. Benefit of non directional spare is that it can be fitted on any position, although some makers recommend only to the rear axle.This thread has now got me thinking, I replaced my 4 tyres I think 4 years ago, for Knokian Weatherproofs , which are directional tyres. I still have the original Hankook vectus 2 , full size spare wheel, never had a puncture, now the thing is ?
Without looking any further I think the spare tyre /wheel is non directional, so I can fit it on either side of the car. I would only run this until I got the puncture repaired or tyre replaced.
But I wonder how many cars are fitted with directional tyres as spares.
Not many - directional tyres are rarely fitted as OE.This thread has now got me thinking, I replaced my 4 tyres I think 4 years ago, for Knokian Weatherproofs , which are directional tyres. I still have the original Hankook vectus 2 , full size spare wheel, never had a puncture, now the thing is ?
Without looking any further I think the spare tyre /wheel is non directional, so I can fit it on either side of the car. I would only run this until I got the puncture repaired or tyre replaced.
But I wonder how many cars are fitted with directional tyres as spares.
The other quirk is that although the car is AWD the spare is of a different make. I have 20" Continentals on drive wheels and I think the spare is Kumho 18" on a steel rim. I thought on AWD you could not mix tyres plus the spare would be brand new with maximum tread, but if it is a rear drive tyre the tread is only about 4mm? Weird!Yes my XC 70 space saver was 2 inch smaller on its tyre diameter than the road wheels. Looked very strange when I had to use it when I had a puncture. My Superb estate had a steel full size spare but the steel wheel was one inch smaller than the road wheels although the tyre aspect ratio was higher and rolling radius the same as the four road wheels.
If it’s a spare then it should only be used for a limited distance. On my Superb 4WD the spare was full width on a smaller steel wheel but higher aspect ratio than the road wheels. So it’s rolling diameter was the same albeit it had full tread depth. But the spare wheel had the 50 mph speed limit sticker on it so clearly Skoda saw it as a “get you home“ fitment. But more importantly to me it presented no limitations to towing.The other quirk is that although the car is AWD the spare is of a different make. I have 20" Continentals on drive wheels and I think the spare is Kumho 18" on a steel rim. I thought on AWD you could not mix tyres plus the spare would be brand new with maximum tread, but if it is a rear drive tyre the tread is only about 4mm? Weird!
Bit like my last Volvo. What’s the overall diameter of the space saver compared to your road tyresMi Volkswagen Tiguan the steel space saver wheel is 17" but the road wheels are 19" from new less than 10,000 miles to each your own