BMW X5 all modela excessive tyre wear
BMW X5 all modela excessive tyre wear
Author
Discussion

twin_turbo_man

Original Poster:

1 posts

89 months

Thursday 26th July 2018
quotequote all
I own a 2012 X5 M sport 30d.
Workshop controller at my local BMW dealership and he has 26 years of BMW experience tells me that the excessive extreme inner rear tyre edge wear and excessive extreme front tyre outer edge wear is common to all of the X5 range.
I recently had two new rear tyres that had about 4/5mm left apart from the extreme edge. One side down to the canvess.
Guess what BMW UK deny all knowledge of this problem and blame the tracking.
Just beware its the entire range and the X3, also 5 series.
Don't buy these cars new or second hand.
The rear tyres cost me £700.

RSTurboPaul

12,604 posts

278 months

Thursday 26th July 2018
quotequote all
Did you have the tracking checked and adjusted to BMW recommendations?

Pistonheader101

2,206 posts

127 months

Friday 27th July 2018
quotequote all
Happens on q7s too

coljoh148

2,127 posts

197 months

Friday 27th July 2018
quotequote all
Not exclusive to x5 or BMW.

I blame stty runflats and to a degree mismanaged tyre pressures.

oop north

1,641 posts

148 months

Friday 27th July 2018
quotequote all
And Volvo xc90 (first version) too. LR discoveries do pretty well though - my wife had a mark 1 xc90 and I have a D4 and the tyre saving on he discovery pays for the extra servicing cost, surprisingly

Watchman

6,391 posts

265 months

Friday 27th July 2018
quotequote all
When I took over our W164 Merc ML from my wife, my faster-cornering driving wore the outer edges of the front tyres so I had additional negative camber added to the fronts. This was accomplished by the replacement of the lower wishbone arm bolts to the uprights which pushed the bottom of the uprights out only a minimal amount but it was enough to minimise this issue. They still tended to wear more quickly on the outer edges but this was considerably reduced.

Not all cars can be adjusted easily but if there's a known issue, even if the manufacturers disown the problem, often third parties will come up with a solution. For Subaru's, this was in the form of an adjustable inner bush.

keith333

374 posts

162 months

Friday 27th July 2018
quotequote all
Yep, I have a 2012 and exactly the same tyre wear issues. The fronts tend to be worse than the rears, maybe because its the outer edge its more noticeable. After 15,000 miles I swap the tyres round so that I can get 30k rather than 22k out of them. Rears seem to be last for about 30k.

I've had BMW do the tracking and it makes little difference.

Watchman

6,391 posts

265 months

Friday 27th July 2018
quotequote all
Depends what "tracking" involves. Often it only involves "toe" which in many of these cases isn't the issue/solution. The camber needs changing.


creampuff

6,511 posts

163 months

Saturday 28th July 2018
quotequote all
That useless X3 I've been complaining about on the other thread has extreme edges of the tyres not far about legal minimums and about 5mm in the centre of the tyres.

mr_spock

3,368 posts

235 months

Sunday 29th July 2018
quotequote all
2012 X5 is similar underneath to the first L322 Range Rovers I think? Please correct me if I'm wrong... I had similar on my L322, proper 4 wheel alignment and a track rod end made a HUGE difference to how it felt to drive and tyre wear.

Lozw86

896 posts

152 months

Sunday 29th July 2018
quotequote all
Have you had a full laser wheel alignment performed by a specialist?