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Home > Wheels & Tyres > Tread Depth - when should you change tyres |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
My local dealer won't sell anything with under 4mm. After that the wet weather grip drops off quite steeply. Plus your Wranglers may well get noisy. From memory, 5mm is the minimum for proper winter tyres. Ex AA Series III LWB Safari - Gone
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30th Nov 2015 9:19 pm |
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pcheaven Member Since: 19 Jan 2010 Location: Kent Posts: 1459 |
off road tyres have 8mm+ when new, some have 15mm and some.
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30th Nov 2015 9:20 pm |
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Landiroamer Member Since: 30 Apr 2015 Location: Devon Posts: 1185 |
The fleet folk wont change them until they are at 2mm and they are down right dangerous at that especially at motorway speeds in the rain,
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30th Nov 2015 9:36 pm |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
You have to be careful getting near the limit - and not just with your driving! The maximum fine is several thousand per tyre, for driver and owner. Maybe a few prosecutions would change the fleet owners' minds. Ex AA Series III LWB Safari - Gone
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30th Nov 2015 9:46 pm |
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pcheaven Member Since: 19 Jan 2010 Location: Kent Posts: 1459 |
2mm!!!! -bl00dy dangerus. I change all mine if any one hits 4mm, and 6mm for my winter tyres |
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30th Nov 2015 9:49 pm |
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Bibendum Member Since: 20 Oct 2015 Location: Home in Lancashire Posts: 170 |
Looking around the internet for some evidence based advice, I've found these so far....
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1st Dec 2015 8:55 am |
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Browny90 Member Since: 02 Nov 2015 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 153 |
It may be dangerous, but it's still perfectly legal.. the Minimum tread depth in the UK is 1.6mm for cars and... shock moment 1mm on HGV's!! however, another caviat to car tread depths is, that 1.6mm has to be across 75% of the tyre to fail. so technically you could have less than 1.6mm over most of your tyre and still be perfectly legal.. although you wouldnt want to be the car in front of them when the traffic slows.. There is no recommended winter depth in my opinion as it depends where you're going and what you're doing with it, If you're going off road alot through mud then you may need more than if you're just on road, either way, as much as possible is probably the best option, if you're concerned then they're probably too low.. change them for new, put the old ones in your garage then stick them back on next summer.. The recommended tread depth for opitmum preformance will be brand new tyres.. This is how they're tested. you wont see many cars rolling around Gaydon off road track with 2mm of tread on.. I worked at a Millbrook Proving Ground in bedfordshire, which has an extreme off road circuit and many road surfaces, I carried out various testing in lots of conditions, with hundreds of different vehicles, from tanks & fire engines to electric road sweepers & motorbikes.. Tread depth plays a big part in vehicle handling, especially in bad weather. IF IN DOUBT CHANGE THEM Do a test... Get yourself on a grassy bank or some mud and see how it handles.. MY2011 Freelander 2 GS Santorini Black MY2004 Freelander 1 Sport Java Black MY1986 Defender 90 Stornoway Grey - Fully Rebuilt this Year |
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1st Dec 2015 9:31 am |
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Bibendum Member Since: 20 Oct 2015 Location: Home in Lancashire Posts: 170 |
Errr not quite. Surely 75% is "most" of the tyre? |
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1st Dec 2015 9:47 am |
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Browny90 Member Since: 02 Nov 2015 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 153 |
Apologies, yes, I wrote that wrong.. you NEED 1.6mm across 75% of the tyre so you could have 25% at 1mm and 75% at 1.6mm and still pass as long as there were no cords, bulges etc.. but you have to admit, the laws on tyres are very loose and even barely legal tyres are still dangerous in my opinion..
MY2011 Freelander 2 GS Santorini Black MY2004 Freelander 1 Sport Java Black MY1986 Defender 90 Stornoway Grey - Fully Rebuilt this Year |
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1st Dec 2015 9:53 am |
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Browny90 Member Since: 02 Nov 2015 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 153 |
It alway shocked me on HGV's that you could have 25% with no tread at all (as long as you can see the tread pattern) and the rest at 1mm as long as no cords were showing etc.. Madness for something that can weigh 40 ton+ MY2011 Freelander 2 GS Santorini Black
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1st Dec 2015 9:56 am |
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rchrdleigh Member Since: 18 Aug 2007 Location: Somewhere in the East of England Posts: 1601 |
In most of Europe the limit is 4mm for winter or all season tyres. |
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1st Dec 2015 10:34 am |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
Is that just in winter? Given that our car has M+S tyres as standard, that would apply to us if going abroad. Ex AA Series III LWB Safari - Gone
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1st Dec 2015 10:38 am |
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