old new tyres
Author
Discussion

davidc1

Original Poster:

1,603 posts

178 months

Thursday 16th December 2010
quotequote all
got 2 new conti 3's front tyes for my clio 197 last week.


however , was not pleased as when i inspected them , 1 tyes was date stamped 39/2006 the other was dated mid08.

i told them i wasnt too happy and they swapped the the 06 tyre for another mid08.


am i being picky here?


i guess the moral is to physically see the tyre before it goes on...

davepoth

29,395 posts

215 months

Thursday 16th December 2010
quotequote all
2006 is too old - you'd want to be changing it in less than 2 years regardless of wear to be safe.

Ozzie Osmond

21,189 posts

262 months

Thursday 16th December 2010
quotequote all
If you're fretting about the age of your tyres I hope you're having your airbags changed regularly.

rallycross

13,570 posts

253 months

Thursday 16th December 2010
quotequote all
Ozzie Osmond said:
If you're fretting about the age of your tyres I hope you're having your airbags changed regularly.
Well the bags should be fine, but you do need to referesh the air thats stored in them. wink

Old new tyres will be fine if they are stored ok but how could you (or they) tell if they had been stored well?

davidc1

Original Poster:

1,603 posts

178 months

Friday 17th December 2010
quotequote all
that's my concern , the tyres didnt have that nice fresh black look to 'em.

the week before i got 2 new tyres on the wife's car and the michelins looked "new" and the date stamp was 08/10...

Bluebarge

4,519 posts

194 months

Friday 17th December 2010
quotequote all
Ozzie Osmond said:
If you're fretting about the age of your tyres I hope you're having your airbags changed regularly.
airbags last 10 years generally, plus he'll be relying on his tyres more often than this airbags. OP did the right thing IMHO.

flemke

23,246 posts

253 months

Friday 17th December 2010
quotequote all
davidc1 said:
got 2 new conti 3's front tyes for my clio 197 last week.


however , was not pleased as when i inspected them , 1 tyes was date stamped 39/2006 the other was dated mid08.

i told them i wasnt too happy and they swapped the the 06 tyre for another mid08.


am i being picky here?


i guess the moral is to physically see the tyre before it goes on...
Although newer is always better than older, in general an '06 tyre (which has been stored properly) should present no problems. Think of the number of cars currently driving around with '06 tyres, all of which have been through loads of heat cycles and are therefore more "aged" than yours would have been. Think of the ones driving around with '05 or older tyres.
If the old new tyres have not been properly stored, that is entirely different. The tyre-makers themselves store them properly, although whether a set has been sitting in a dealer's inventory and exposed to sunlight for the last 4 years may be another matter.

Dog Star

17,012 posts

184 months

Friday 17th December 2010
quotequote all
I wouldn't personlly be too worried - it's sunlight that kills them and it's almost certain that they'll have been stashed in a dark warehouse.

nsmith1180

3,941 posts

194 months

Friday 17th December 2010
quotequote all
Bluebarge said:
Ozzie Osmond said:
If you're fretting about the age of your tyres I hope you're having your airbags changed regularly.
airbags last 10 years generally, plus he'll be relying on his tyres more often than this airbags. OP did the right thing IMHO.
Just my thought. Old airbags become more of a worry when you are on old tyres.

Ray Luxury-Yacht

8,918 posts

232 months

Saturday 18th December 2010
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This isn't the full story on tyres and age though really is it?

If you ask most manufacturers, they would say that older tyres ON A VEHICLE are bad news.

BUT if they're stored correctly in a cool, dry environment and not exposed to sunlight, they will actually be fine to fit even after quite a few years.

I can back this up because I found some new 'old stock' Michelins on ebay once, and I called up Michelin and asked this very question.


Ritchie335is

1,969 posts

218 months

Saturday 18th December 2010
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I fitted "new" 5 year old pirellis on the rear and they are unbelievably ste.
The were suspiciously cheap on ebay and only checked the date when I got round to fitting them.
One plus is that they appear to be made out of incredibly hard rubber which allows lots of action without any wear.