SigOris
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- John
- Joined
- May 18, 2022
- Threads
- 47
- Messages
- 1,243
- Reaction score
- 4,089
- Location
- Greenwood Maine
- Vehicle(s)
- MY23 F150 CC Lariat PB & MY25 Mustang GT Convertible 60th #0807
- Occupation
- Retired DoD EE
What’s interesting is that the manual recommends the X rotation.45,000 on my OEM Hankooks and still have about 30% of the tread. All tires are even, no cupping or balance issues. I'm fine with the Hankooks, but won't replace them with the same tires. I also recommend getting an alignment when new tires are installed. And not from a dealer, but from a business that specializes in alignment.
Rotation. It takes a number of miles for a tire to "set." Many people have no problems with "Xing" when rotating, but think about what you are asking the tire to do. There is a crown on every road and that means right side tires experience more of the crown than left. When you "X" them the tire now runs the opposite direction and is open for issues because the tire also has to "reset" from one side to the other. Yes the distance is small, but this can cause balance and wear problems. I rotate front to rear only on the same side and have never had an issue of any kind.
i had a passionate discussion with a service writer about this until I retrieved the manual that came with my truck and she stated “ well Ford is wrong “
im in the X camp and as in life “ too each his or her own “
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