How old can tires safely be run?

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May 21, 2020
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Atlanta
I've found a couple of new Pirelli Scorpion Verde All Seasons for one of our cars. New stock, great price but they are two years old. We are keeping the car for another three years. Am i still "in the window"?
 
I've found a couple of new Pirelli Scorpion Verde All Seasons for one of our cars. New stock, great price but they are two years old. We are keeping the car for another three years. Am i still "in the window"?
How are you certain of the age of the tires? Date stamp on the sidewall?
 
Should have no trouble at all with those. I bought some 6 year old unmounted snow tires that the local dealer had in the back of the storage room. They were like new and had no problems with them for the 3 years I ran them.
 
They're fine. They have a preservative so they've aged less than the 2 years they would have aged in service.
 
There's way more safety factor in tires than we give them credit for. The tire industry recommendation to be throwing away tires at 7 years is incredibly wasteful IMO. It really depends on many factors, primarily how they were stored, heat, and UV exposure. Also it's really the steel and kevlar inside tires that does most of the mechanical holding together of things. If there's a significant enough discount I would not hesitate to buy old stock tires that are a few years old.
 
I agree with nobb. I always have a " new, stocked,stored" set of 4 tires for my 3 vehicles. You just wait for a sale online somewhere, then snatch them up. Put the tires in a plastic bag, get most of the air out, and seal the bag. Store them indoors where there is little temperature variation, and completely dark. They will last forever like that. Just pulled a spare set to install on one of my cars, opened the bag, still smelled like new rubber after 5 years. It's the sun, road salt, high and low temps from driving, and dirt that kills tires. I'd say UV rays are the worst offender out of them all. My 03' Toyota Solara still has the original full size spare in the trunk. Looks brand new after 22 yrs. No dry rot, or cracking near the bead. Even the valve stem is still soft and pliable. So, store them correctly, and they will last a very long time. I don't know anybody who throws out their "doughnut" spare tire every 7 years.
 
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