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Home > Technical > Hypothesis on problems with Haldex and rear diff. |
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pab Member Since: 28 Aug 2012 Location: Now in Mid-Wales Posts: 2007 |
I'm afraid tyre wear is not a reliable indicator of power distribution. The front wheels do the steering and most of the braking, so on a fwd or 4wd (and often on a rwd too) the front tyres will always wear more than the rears to some degree. The harder the car is driven the greater the front wear.
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23rd Mar 2014 9:50 am |
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impact Member Since: 11 Mar 2011 Location: Perth Posts: 139 |
Hi Pab, yah I hear you, and I too thought that front tyres work harder and therfore should wear more. But majority of people are reporting even wear!
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23rd Mar 2014 11:00 am |
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pab Member Since: 28 Aug 2012 Location: Now in Mid-Wales Posts: 2007 |
Tyre wear for me seems to be pretty even, so I don't really worry about it. If different tyres showed different wear patterns I'd take more notice, but so far they don't. As for complying with the manufacturer's recommendations, I guess technically I don't, but so far it hadn't been a problem. |
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23rd Mar 2014 11:29 am |
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TonyJ Member Since: 28 Mar 2008 Location: Southampton Posts: 105 |
Over about 32k miles the rear tyres have 1mm more wear than the fronts. This has been the same on two sets of tyres. Remember there are never problems, just new challenges |
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23rd Mar 2014 7:44 pm |
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SakoQuad Member Since: 15 Jun 2013 Location: Gloucester Posts: 314 |
Ditto, perhaps 2 mm more wear on rear tyres over 32k miles.
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23rd Mar 2014 7:56 pm |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
The FR2 is basically a front-wheel-drive car in normal use. On such cars front tyre wear can be considerable - particularly shoulder wear. It depends very much on how you drive. |
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23rd Mar 2014 9:57 pm |
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impact Member Since: 11 Mar 2011 Location: Perth Posts: 139 |
Very interesting. I thought that, during normal driving conditions, maximum power that can be applied to rear axle was 50%. For anything more than that rear wheels need to lose traction first. Today I tried making either front or rear wheels spin on tarmac. I can't do it. And I hardly think that you'd be spending so much time off roading to produce noticeable preferential wear on your rear tyres. MY10 TD4 SE Auto |
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26th Mar 2014 1:18 pm |
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SakoQuad Member Since: 15 Jun 2013 Location: Gloucester Posts: 314 |
Towing a caravan might account for the extra wear in my case |
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26th Mar 2014 6:16 pm |
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heliosuk Member Since: 08 Oct 2010 Location: United Kingdom Posts: 118 |
But your Hypothesis fails straight away on the basis that you have no control as to the conditions the cars operate under.
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27th Mar 2014 11:21 pm |
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impact Member Since: 11 Mar 2011 Location: Perth Posts: 139 |
Hi Heliosuk,
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29th Mar 2014 12:34 pm |
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