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-   -   Recommendation for used tires? (https://www.revscene.net/forums/713279-recommendation-used-tires.html)

imothers 09-06-2017 05:46 AM

Recommendation for used tires?
 
I need to pick up a pair of 185/75 R14 tires for my 'spare' car this Thursday or Friday. Reasonably decent all season should be fine. Any recommendations for a source? There a few dealers on CL in Poco Burnaby and Surrey, not sure if some are better than others?

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thumper 09-06-2017 08:38 AM

the last time i had to buy used tires from a retailer it was for SORAT in north van, they used to be a RS sponsor but no longer (not sure what happened).

otherwise there is craigslist.

fliptuner 09-06-2017 08:42 AM

Make sure you check the manufacturing date (nothing older than 5 years) and check for patches that are too close to the sidewall.

Dragon-88 09-06-2017 02:48 PM

Theres a tire shop on hastings and commercial that sells used tires.

hchang 09-06-2017 09:15 PM

Not to shit on your thread but imo tires and brakes are two things you shouldn't cheap out on on your car.

If you can't afford new tires, save up and replace two at a time, always new ones in front because you need those to steer.

Even cheap new tires will be better than used good tires

Lomac 09-06-2017 09:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hchang (Post 8860193)
Even cheap new tires will be better than used good tires

Not strictly true.

I'll put my used Nokian winter tires against any cheap new winter tire any day and I'll guarantee it'll outperform them all.

If a used tire has a lot of tread left, no questionable patches, and is within the manufacturing date, then there's no reason why buying a good brand/model would be a poor buy.

Quote:

Originally Posted by hchang (Post 8860193)
If you can't afford new tires, save up and replace two at a time, always new ones in front because you need those to steer.

One thing to keep in mind is that a lot of tire shops wont install two different styles of tires on your car simply due to liability issues. They'll usually mount those tires on a separate set of rims, give them to you, and you then have to mount the rims on your car.

Simplex123 09-16-2017 08:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hchang (Post 8860193)
If you can't afford new tires, save up and replace two at a time, always new ones in front because you need those to steer.

Actually when I was researching for my car when I had to buy two tires that it's recommended for new tires be placed in the rear because if they're placed in the front it will cause oversteer when hydroplaning.

https://tirerack.com/tires/tiretech/....jsp?techid=52

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