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  • Tire question

    I picked up a set of 4 12" Kumhos from the junkyard.

    Two of them are virtually new and are on my car now.

    The others are a different story. One has 80% of its tread and is wearing evenly. The other is trashed due to uneven wear - one side is bald and the other has lots of tread.

    I'm not sure what to do with these tires. Can I put the good tire on, and buy a new Kumho to replace the bad one? Will this cause wear or driveability issues due to different tread depths? Or should I just buy 2 new tires and save the good one for a spare?

    Any input is appreciated.


    Thanks,

    Tim
    White '89L auto - Sold!
    Silver '06 Rav4, 95k!

  • #2
    I would get 2 new tires. Save the good used one for a spare.
    Festiva: Because even my dog can build a Honda.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    '90 L. B8ME/Kia Rio 5 speed. Rio/Aspire suspension swap. :-D
    '81 Mustang. Inline 6, Automatic.
    '95 Eagle Summit Wagon. 4G64 Powered.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by JPT View Post
      I would get 2 new tires. Save the good used one for a spare.
      X2 I would buy 2 and save the good one for a spare.
      '90 LX

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      • #4
        yep, tires are extremely cheap for this car. have 5 good tires to be safe

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        • #5
          Thanks for the input. Sounds like two new ones is the way to go.

          Can I use a different brand/tread for the other two tires (cheaper), or do they have to be Kumhos?

          I had a truck with different treads on the front and rear tires, and it seemed OK. But would it cause problems in a Festiva? Right now the car handles fine but I don't want any surprises in an emergency.


          Thanks.

          -Tim
          White '89L auto - Sold!
          Silver '06 Rav4, 95k!

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          • #6
            Rule of thumb is 4/32" max on the difference, on the same axle.
            You can run 2 different kinds of tire on any vehicle but it's best to stay with something similar- in 12s there's not going to be a huge variance in tread styles and compounds so you should be fine.

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