Car Tyres 10 Years old

Author
Discussion

Jumpingjackflash

Original Poster:

643 posts

194 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Hello I have just bought a Ferrari F355 with tyres ten years old. They look ok but I have been advised they are illegal. Before I contact the dealer I want to understand what the Law is please?

I contacted local tyre companies but they are unsure because they don't see many cars with 10 year old tyres that are mostly garage queens.

The internet has more information regarding commercial vehicles and the law with 10 year old tyres.

steveo3002

10,862 posts

189 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
more not recommended than illegal

stuckmojo

3,458 posts

203 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Having looked into this today, it looks like there's recommendation, not legal requirement.


Pica-Pica

15,204 posts

99 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Why drive a Ferrari with 10 yo tyres?

sherman

14,424 posts

230 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
4 new tyres. Piece of mind for £500 or so quid. Plus you know its ready for summer then driving

FilH

900 posts

159 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Is this not standard Ferrari etiquette to pay £1000s in servicing, but run 10year old plus tyres?

samjlevy

275 posts

91 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Pica-Pica said:
Why drive a Ferrari with 10 yo tyres?
I think OP is trying to ascertain if the dealer should have put new tyres on the car when purchasing.

steveo3002

10,862 posts

189 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
low power hatchback for running to the shops...id let em wear out

valuable fast car...replace em

Master Bean

4,444 posts

135 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
sherman said:
4 new tyres. Piece of mind for £500 or so quid. Plus you know its ready for summer then driving
More like £1k.

kambites

69,497 posts

236 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Given that it's a Ferrari, it will probably have been stored indoors away from UV, in which case they're almost certainly fine... but it is "almost certainly" good enough?

Even if they're fine in terms of safety, they probably wont have as much grip as they would have when new.

Edited by kambites on Monday 4th April 14:07

The spinner of plates

18,075 posts

215 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
It's not illegal if condition and tread depth would pass an MOT.

But I'd replace them on the grounds of improved driving experience and to a degree safety when pushing on.

Panamax

6,228 posts

49 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
sherman said:
4 new tyres. Piece of mind for £500 or so quid.
Somebody's in optimistic mood today!

In the meantime I'm willing to bet there are hundreds of thousands, if not millions of cars on UK roads with 10-year old tyres.

sherman

14,424 posts

230 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Panamax said:
sherman said:
4 new tyres. Piece of mind for £500 or so quid.
Somebody's in optimistic mood today!

In the meantime I'm willing to bet there are hundreds of thousands, if not millions of cars on UK roads with 10-year old tyres.
You dont buy and run a ferrari to worry about the price of consumables.
Im sure you could get £500 tyres but you wouldnt want them on a ferrari.

Monkeylegend

27,721 posts

246 months

PH User

22,154 posts

123 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
sherman said:
Panamax said:
sherman said:
4 new tyres. Piece of mind for £500 or so quid.
Somebody's in optimistic mood today!

In the meantime I'm willing to bet there are hundreds of thousands, if not millions of cars on UK roads with 10-year old tyres.
You dont buy and run a ferrari to worry about the price of consumables.
Im sure you could get £500 tyres but you wouldnt want them on a ferrari.
Not much piece of mind then lol

sherman

14,424 posts

230 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
PH User said:
sherman said:
Panamax said:
sherman said:
4 new tyres. Piece of mind for £500 or so quid.
Somebody's in optimistic mood today!

In the meantime I'm willing to bet there are hundreds of thousands, if not millions of cars on UK roads with 10-year old tyres.
You dont buy and run a ferrari to worry about the price of consumables.
Im sure you could get £500 tyres but you wouldnt want them on a ferrari.
Not much piece of mind then lol
Compared to 10 year old tyres with unknown issues even a £500 set of new tyres would be better but buying the correct tyres first time will save you in the long run.
I also had no idea how much ferrari tyres were and was just basing the £500 off of my recent purchase of 4 19" tyres.

sparkythecat

8,015 posts

270 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
If it’s on 18” rims, a set of Michelin Pilot Sports for instance would be about £700.
Cheaper brands are available.

InitialDave

13,232 posts

134 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Echoing the "not illegal, but bad idea" others have said.

Looks like a full set of, for example, Michelin PS4 would be £576 from Black Circles, and they have 15% off those today, so £490. Based on 225/40R18 and 265/40R18.

Vince70

1,942 posts

209 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
Can’t you get a set of part worns from the scrappy or some nice new landsail tyres for the motor.

I once bought a BMW E36 on 15 year old Pirelli tyres and the car was a death trap even on the straight it would snap out so no way would I risk running a Ferrari on hard old rubber.

TO73074E

483 posts

42 months

Monday 4th April 2022
quotequote all
I wouldn't risk it on a Civic let alone a Ferrari no matter what the law is. Just change them.