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Encyclopedia > Tire rotation

Tire rotation or rotating tires is the practice of moving automobile tires from one wheel to another to ensure even tire wear. Tire wear is uneven for any number of reasons. Even tire wear is desirable to maintain consistent performance in the vehicle.


By design the weight on the front and rear axles are different causing uneven wear. As the engine is in the front, the front axle typically has more of the weight. For rear wheel drive vehicles, the weight distribution between front and back is typically 60:40. Front wheel drive vehicles also have the differential in front, adding to the weight with a typical weight distribution of 70:30. This means, all else being equal, the front tires wear out at more than twice the rate of the rear wheels. Thus, tire rotation needs to occur more frequently for front-wheel drive vehicles.


Turning the vehicle will cause uneven tire wear. The outside, front tire is worn disproportionately. Cloverleaf interchanges and parking ramps turn right in right hand drive countries, causing the left front tire to be worn faster than the right front. Furthermore, right turns are tighter than left turns, causing more tire wear. Conversely the sidewalls on the right tire tends to be bumped and rubbed against the curb while parking the vehicle, causing asymmetric sidewall wear. The symmetric opposite occurs in countries that drive on the left.


In additional, mechanical problems in the vehicle may cause uneven tire wear. The wheels need to be aligned with each other and the vehicle. The wheel that is out of alignment will tend to be dragged along by the other wheels, causing uneven wear in that tire. If the alignment is such that the vehicle tends to turn, the driver will correct by steering against the tendency. In effect the vehicle is constantly turning, causing uneven tire wear. Also, if a tire is under or over-inflated, it will wear differently than the other tires on the vehicle. Rotating will not help in this case and the inflation needs to be corrected.


Manufacturers will recommend tire rotation frequency and pattern. Depending on the specifics of the vehicle tire rotation may be recommended every 12,000 km. The rotation pattern is typically moving the back wheels to the front and the front to the back but crossing them when moving to the back. If the tires are unidirectional, the rotation can only be rotated front to back on the same side of the vehicle to preserve the rotational direction of the tires. More complex rotation patterns are required if the vehicle has a full-size spare tire that is part of the rotation or if there are snow tires


  Results from FactBites:
 
Tire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2063 words)
The "steering feel" of such tires is different from that of pneumatic tires, as their solidity does not allow the amount of torsion that exists in the carcass of a pneumatic tire under steering forces, and the resultant sensory feedback through the steering apparatus.
The tire was heated in a forge, placed on the wheel and quenched, causing the metal to contract and imparting stiffness to the wheel.
Tire rotation moves tires between the different wheels of the vehicle as front and back axles carry different loads and thus the tires wear differently.
Tire rotation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (503 words)
Tire rotation or rotating tires is the practice of moving automobile tires from one wheel to another to ensure even tire wear.
This means, all else being equal, the front tires wear out at almost twice the rate of the rear wheels, especially when factoring the additional stress that braking puts on the front tires.
The rotation pattern is typically moving the back wheels to the front and the front to the back but crossing them when moving to the back.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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