Anyone seen this before?

Author
Discussion

brythered92

Original Poster:

22 posts

168 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
Hi all,

My front tyres on my e class Mercedes are appearing to be worn and cut along the outer edge of the tyre. Does anyone know if this is where the rubber is old or if it’s something like tracking / balance that could be causing this?




chrismoose91

211 posts

114 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
They're 11 years old?

steve2

1,812 posts

232 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
Defiantly due to age

brythered92

Original Poster:

22 posts

168 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
chrismoose91 said:
They're 11 years old?
The cars 2018 how can you tell the age of the rubber?

brythered92

Original Poster:

22 posts

168 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
brythered92 said:
chrismoose91 said:
They're 11 years old?
The cars 2018 how can you tell the age of the rubber?
Oh just saw the 2012 number! Is that the year of manufacture. Weird that they would put that on a 2018 car?

P. ONeill

1,455 posts

66 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
chrismoose91 said:
They're 11 years old?
I don’t think that’s the date of manufacture, it’s usually a six digit number?

carinaman

23,065 posts

186 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
I don't think 2012 is the date of manufacture:

https://good-garage-guide.honestjohn.co.uk/tyres/t...

motco

16,565 posts

260 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
I was told by a tyre fitter that Avon/Cooper tyres are well known for age related cracking before other brands. What brand are these?

brythered92

Original Poster:

22 posts

168 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
These are Michelin

Missy Charm

1,114 posts

42 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
Aren't modern Mercedes cars notorious for tyre 'scrubbing'? Could be the result of unusual loads that process is putting on the tyres...

Philvrs

636 posts

111 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
P. ONeill said:
I don’t think that’s the date of manufacture, it’s usually a six digit number?
4 digit i thought (week/year e.g made today would have 1423 on them)
OP, could be tracking, what pressure are they? Or do you just rely on TPMS readings?
Are the rears same age but fine?

Edited by Philvrs on Friday 31st March 21:00


Edited by Philvrs on Friday 31st March 21:00

MattsCar

1,690 posts

119 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
It is a 4 digit number.

First 2 digits represents the week built. Second 2 digits represent the year.

Philvrs

636 posts

111 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
If you have any doubts, just buy a new pair.
Keep the old ones and list them on ebay, an amateur drifter could use them if they’re a popular size.

Pica-Pica

15,141 posts

98 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
MattsCar said:
It is a 4 digit number.

First 2 digits represents the week built. Second 2 digits represent the year.
.. and it’s usually in its own ‘box’ not with another number. Re-check OP, and put an image up.

Philvrs

636 posts

111 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
brythered92 said:
Oh just saw the 2012 number! Is that the year of manufacture. Weird that they would put that on a 2018 car?
Probably a patent or regulatory number for that tyre design.

BananaFama

4,788 posts

93 months

Friday 31st March 2023
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steve2 said:
Defiantly due to age
And possibly sun damage ,is the car parked in a garage or open air ?

sixor8

6,940 posts

282 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
MattsCar said:
It is a 4 digit number.

First 2 digits represents the week built. Second 2 digits represent the year.
Unless you're looking at classic cars at auctions where people never change them. frown 3 digits and a small triangle is the 1990s and I've seen just 3 digits, i.e. 1980s. eek In those cases, the year of the decade is the single digit at the end.

MattsCar

1,690 posts

119 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
Pica-Pica said:
MattsCar said:
It is a 4 digit number.

First 2 digits represents the week built. Second 2 digits represent the year.
.. and it’s usually in its own ‘box’ not with another number. Re-check OP, and put an image up.
Yep, I doubt that they are 2012 tyres.

P. ONeill

1,455 posts

66 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
Philvrs said:
4 digit i thought (week/year e.g made today would have 1423 on them)
You are indeed correct.

pheonix478

2,880 posts

52 months

Friday 31st March 2023
quotequote all
Looks like an old tyre to me too. That said neither of those pictures show the age stamp. Look for something that says something like DOT XXXX XXXX 2517. As other have said, that would be 25th week of 2017