Tire rotation can be beneficial in several ways. When done at the
recommended times, it can preserve balanced handling and traction of
the tires and even out tire wear. It can even provide performance
advantages.
When should tires be rotated?
We recommend that high performance tires be rotated every 3,000 to 5,000 miles, even if they don't show signs of wear.
Tire
rotation can often be done with oil change intervals while the vehicle
is off the ground anyway. Tire rotation helps even out tire wear by
allowing each tire to serve in as many of the vehicle's wheel positions
as possible. Remember, tire rotation can't correct wear problems due to
worn mechanical parts or incorrect inflation pressures.
While
every vehicle is equipped with four tires, usually the tires on the
front need to accomplish very different tasks than the rear tires. And
the tasks encountered on a front wheel drive car are considerably
different than those of a rear wheel drive car. Tire wear experienced
on a performance vehicle will usually be more severe than those on a
family sedan. Each wheel position can cause different wear rates and
different type of tire wear.
It is an advantage when all
four tires wear together because as wear reduces a tire's tread depth,
it allows tires to respond to the driver's input more quickly,
maintains the handling, and it helps increase a tire's cornering
traction.
When your tires wear out together you can get a
new set of tires, without being forced to buy pairs. If you replace
tires in sets you will maintain the original handling balance. And our
suppliers are constantly introducing new tires, each of which improves
upon their past product's performance. If you replace your tires in
sets, it allows you to experience today's technology, instead of being
forced to match yesterday's.