I buy used car tires off eBay with 8/32 tread. They're about half price and haven't gotten a bad one yet. It takes a while to get a set doing that.
Yeah 2 years is a lot of time if you are buying tires new. The very max i would be comfortable driving would be 8 years. 2 years is already a quarter of it gone. But would make it a mess if you are replacing one of the tires this year, and the other 3 2 years from nowIt's 2 years off its life on a low mileage car. On collector cars, we replace tires due to age, not mileage. So, it's already aged out by 2 years. This is the 2nd problem I had with TR. The first one they resolved on a professional level. This one not..
I share this opinion. Tires are stored in a climate controlled warehouse, I doubt they aged a bit.In my opinion, an unused 2 year old tire stored properly in a warehouse is no different than a tire manufactured last week. They are tires, not doughnuts.
In Germany it is 6 months before tire seller has to inform customer that tires are older than 6 mos. I think at one point 6mos was max that they could sell.In my opinion, an unused 2 year old tire stored properly in a warehouse is no different than a tire manufactured last week. They are tires, not doughnuts.
Tire Rack actually will discount older stock tires significantly , note that to buyer. I think generally they track freshness of stock.Tires don't start really aging until they hit the pavement and the preservative wears off. Yes they age but it's not a 1:1 ratio.
I'm unaware of Tire Rack promising a specific freshness, and don't believe you're going to win your credit card chargeback.
I've had really good luck with disputes but wouldn't use it here. I use it for double charges, incorrect charges I have a receipt for, etc. But only AFTER documenting dates, times, chat logs that show strongly I'm right.I agree with the others take the $70 and call it good. I have had terrible luck with credit card disputes. It seems they just like to deny those types of claims however I wish you the best of luck. Note to myself: I will be checking tire dates while it's still in the parking lot next time and I hope a lot of other BITOG'ers do the same.
Not if you do some drifting and burnouts...I was looking at Tire Agent as I saw here there was a Capital One deal, but they sell new tires up to four years old. I’m guessing what I’m buying isn’t very popular (16” performance summer) and so likely high risk. And they won’t tell you about specific age ahead of an order. It would have been a good deal, but probably a while away from needing to mount and the car isn’t driven much. So I’ll come against age limits before I consume the tread.
Not if you do some drifting and burnouts...
You must be a liberal. My money is my money. and how I use it is my discretion. oh, local shops order from TR too. They deliver next day. and it's NOT a collectable car. It's my wife's car, and she drives maybe 3000-4000 miles annually. So The tires age out before the tread wears out. You can't seem to understand that. Your logic you already lost 20%-33% of your tire life due to age.Are we just going to gloss over the fact that OP has the money for a "collector car" but is picking a fight with TR over tire freshness they never promised to deliver?
OP, if you have particular needs for tire freshness, you should be dealing with a local tire dealer who will support these kinds of special needs.
Judging by the price, these are likely to be quite high performance tires with soft compound, in which case, 10 years is WAY TOO LONG to leave them on. 5 years, tops.
My politics are exactly that...mine. You know nothing about me.You must be a liberal. My money is my money. and how I use it is my discretion. oh, local shops order from TR too. They deliver next day. and it's NOT a collectable car. It's my wife's car, and she drives maybe 3000-4000 miles annually. So The tires age out before the tread wears out. You can't seem to understand that. Your logic you already lost 20%-33% of your tire life due to age.