Hi everyone,
As the title indicates, does anyone actually buy tires from Tire Rack anymore?
In general their prices are not great especially when you consider the cost to mount and balance the tires. I have looked on their website for the affiliated shops to mount and balance the tires, and some shops are over $60.00 per tire. Yes there are cheaper shops, but at a minimum you will be paying at least $100.00 for mounting and balancing. The mounting and balancing costs negate any real savings in buying from Tire Rack.
I was looking at a set of BFG tires for my car and it is close to $200.00 cheaper to buy them from Costco (included mounting and balancing and rebate). I basically buy all of my tires from Costco.
I have purchased two different sets of tires from Tire Rack because the deal was too good to pass up and even with the mounting and balancing costs, they were still a great deal. I will say that I had no issues whatsoever in buying both sets of tires from Tire Rack.
I just don't see the draw to buy from them unless it's a stellar deal.
What do you think?
There is a very interesting phenomenon going on here.
When Tire Rack first came into existence, it was not uncommon for tire dealers to have a price that included mounting and balancing. So Tire Rack's price looked really good - until people noticed the shipping charges and tire shops started charging more for mount and balance. It took a while, but that's where we got to now.
The same thing is happening with Amazon. People have become aware of the shipping costs and what is driving everyone to use Amazon is the convenience. The buying public really hates driving and spending all that time to shop. It's so much easier to browse a computer and have the stuff delivered. The fact that Amazon has stuff that a regular store can't stock is a major plus.
I'm curious, you have Dunn Tire near you correct? DT/AT now owns them so wondering if you've tried them and if so, your opinion of them?Coincidentally, the TR prices is the same as the local tire stores in my area. Or I should say the the local stores have finally started to match the online tire stores. However, I am usually very dissatisfied with the install of many local shops. Dissatisfied with the attitude, lack of knowledge, poor tire balancing etc.
I bought my Michelin Primacy LTX from TR and can say in confidence that it is not worth it, I am $520 into endless tire re-balances, diagnostics at 4 different shops, one shop says that another did not balance properly on two Roadforce Balancers one of the them is Hunter Elite but regardless I have a vibration at 63-73MPH that I did not not have before these tires. Like I said, if I bought from Discount Tire, likely, they would at least consider trying to rule out tires as a possible culprit, Tire Rack tells me your problem is the install, installers are telling me it is something else or out of round tires, endless loop with no way to return the tires or get them exchanged. Michelin as many may know, if you have a problem with vibrations send you packing as their acceptable roadforce is up to 40! It is possible that I have issues somewhere in the driveline but I did not have them before these 4 Michelins were mounted 1 months ago.
Why do you have it set up for sticker weights on a steel wheel? You’ll get a better balance with clip/hammer on weights on the outer lip. Not that this affects road force, but heavy:big wheels and tires with a lip on the wheel I’d definitely be putting clip ons if I was worried about the quality and accuracy of the balance.And hence why I will continue to to use "Road Force" numbers as one of my tools.
I spent 3 months getting rid of (95% anyway) the massive vibration on my brand new F250.
Ford would not fix it. These were General Grabber LT's........
I used seat of the pants and this Ap to measure vib's.
This is "exaggerated" from my previous Mustang a while back, proving flat spotting is real.
(many "still argue" it is not)..... This was after driving for 8 minutes, on a highway, back to back.
I live less than 1 mile from a 65 MPH highway, so easy for me to test "before".........
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Of course like anything, the RF machine is not perfect. But it was very consistent for me.
As an example. Pretty much everyone knows with 3/4-1 tons, to reduce air pressure
from factory spec's when unloaded for better ride quality. But here is some "proof"
Same exact tire..... (this was the spare, which RF'd ironically, WAY better than all 4
factory mounts)
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Since I have 12 vehicles, 3 trailers (even a bobcat), I buy a crap ton of tires.
Have had my own Hunter balancer and Atlas tire machine for close to 30 years.
Got RF machine about 5 years ago now. My experience many times is just like
this first poster here.
I find it very difficult to pick new tires. None of the "expert" test/comparisons bother to test the most important quality - roundness and ability to balance. All my cars seem to be very sensitive to this.
Every time I bought tires new tires in the last 20 years, I got front-end shaking that's new to the car. In almost every instance, balancing/rebalancing didn't help. I ended up having to pay for road force measurements, only to find out that the tires were in fact badly out of round from the start. Claiming warranty based on out-of-roundness is generally very difficult. Manufacturers...
- ProbeGT
- Replies: 100
- Forum: Tires & Wheels
I have the time/ability/equipment to
Balance wheel without tire
Measure wheel runout at bead mounting surface
Balance wheel or wheel/tire on 2 separate Hunter machines
Measure hub and/or rotor runout on car
Measure runout of OD of tire itself (crudely due to tire tread, but still)
"eyeball" tire runout on older Hunter balancer, which never had tire hood.
RF tire (complete FULL RF procedure if desired).
Check if centering is correct in mounting wheel on balancer (RF machines do this)
Run vibration ap on vehicle (and interpret results, been ME for NAVY for 41 years, involved
in and even wrote testing procedures for vibration tests for military equipment).
This problem is so prevalent, I'm thinking about starting a side business to diagnose
(and at least give it a real true faith effort) and eliminate/drastically reduce, tire/wheel
induced vibrations on "problem" cars. Retire in 3 months, have equipment/time/knowledge.
I'm not a people person and almost always think I'm right, so that whole deal might not
work out too well.![]()
I don’t buy my tires from Costco I have bought the same tires for less money from tire rack had them shipped to discount tire for mounting and balance 25 a tire. Not s big deal for me.Hi everyone,
As the title indicates, does anyone actually buy tires from Tire Rack anymore?
In general their prices are not great especially when you consider the cost to mount and balance the tires. I have looked on their website for the affiliated shops to mount and balance the tires, and some shops are over $60.00 per tire. Yes there are cheaper shops, but at a minimum you will be paying at least $100.00 for mounting and balancing. The mounting and balancing costs negate any real savings in buying from Tire Rack.
I was looking at a set of BFG tires for my car and it is close to $200.00 cheaper to buy them from Costco (included mounting and balancing and rebate). I basically buy all of my tires from Costco.
I have purchased two different sets of tires from Tire Rack because the deal was too good to pass up and even with the mounting and balancing costs, they were still a great deal. I will say that I had no issues whatsoever in buying both sets of tires from Tire Rack.
I just don't see the draw to buy from them unless it's a stellar deal.
What do
Good thing he didn't see my wheels and tires.