Mrsilv I agree with you as far as the customer service angle of your post goes. However I believe your quotes are really only relevant to tires that have already been put into service. There may be a misconception here in that there are two separate anti-aging mechanisms: the preservative put on a new tire that is worn off in the first few miles of use, and anti-aging compounds actually mixed into the tire rubber that are continually distributed throughout rubber as the tire flexes.
I am sure that the first quote, for example, refers to six years from the time the tire is put in service, as 1) the customer is not expected to be aware of the manufacture date, and 2) there would I assume be a separate tire-manufacturer shelf life stating how old the tire could be before it is sold. So the official DiamlerChrysler position was probably that the tire would be safe if put into service at the end of its shelf life and used for six years, and I most likely that is still an exceedingly conservative approach since that is what manufacturers MUST take towards tire issues these days.
If you use common sense, use your vehicles regularly and keep them in a garage and away from ozone sources, you could safely go much more than six years in use. If you have tires on a car that is parked outside with full sun exposure in a hot climate on a vehicle that you rarely drive, then that is what the six year recommendation is made for. In fact it seems remarkable that under that kind of environmental attack the manufacturers would still stand behind their tires for six years: it shows just how resistant to degradation modern tires must be.
When it comes to new tires, though, I haven't seen any evidence, caution, statement etc, here or elsewhere, that a tire isn't essentially as good as new up to the last day of the manufacturer's shelf life it properly stored, and probably much longer.
Instead I see people taking already conservative recommendations, inappropriately applying them, and then having a fit when reasonable people don't fall in line with their flawed conclusions.
I am sure that the first quote, for example, refers to six years from the time the tire is put in service, as 1) the customer is not expected to be aware of the manufacture date, and 2) there would I assume be a separate tire-manufacturer shelf life stating how old the tire could be before it is sold. So the official DiamlerChrysler position was probably that the tire would be safe if put into service at the end of its shelf life and used for six years, and I most likely that is still an exceedingly conservative approach since that is what manufacturers MUST take towards tire issues these days.
If you use common sense, use your vehicles regularly and keep them in a garage and away from ozone sources, you could safely go much more than six years in use. If you have tires on a car that is parked outside with full sun exposure in a hot climate on a vehicle that you rarely drive, then that is what the six year recommendation is made for. In fact it seems remarkable that under that kind of environmental attack the manufacturers would still stand behind their tires for six years: it shows just how resistant to degradation modern tires must be.
When it comes to new tires, though, I haven't seen any evidence, caution, statement etc, here or elsewhere, that a tire isn't essentially as good as new up to the last day of the manufacturer's shelf life it properly stored, and probably much longer.
Instead I see people taking already conservative recommendations, inappropriately applying them, and then having a fit when reasonable people don't fall in line with their flawed conclusions.