nankang tyres crack in 12 months
nankang tyres crack in 12 months
Author
Discussion

journeymanpro

900 posts

98 months

Saturday 9th August 2025
quotequote all
MustangGT said:
I would look at the date code on the tyre, they could be older than you think.
Did you read the op?

GordonGekko

271 posts

110 months

Saturday 9th August 2025
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With car rubber parts are degrading prematurely across budget and premium price points, it prompts the thought of a contributing factor - are chemicals added to road grit perhaps….?

steveo3002

Original Poster:

10,987 posts

195 months

Saturday 9th August 2025
quotequote all
GordonGekko said:
With car rubber parts are degrading prematurely across budget and premium price points, it prompts the thought of a contributing factor - are chemicals added to road grit perhaps….?
my bet is the good stuff is taken out now

back in the 90s when i started driving i dont recall ever seeing a cracked tyre , they were just kept and used until worn out , ive had part worns /scrap yard finds and they just lasted until bald

Mabbs9

1,519 posts

239 months

Saturday 9th August 2025
quotequote all
steveo3002 said:
GordonGekko said:
With car rubber parts are degrading prematurely across budget and premium price points, it prompts the thought of a contributing factor - are chemicals added to road grit perhaps….?
my bet is the good stuff is taken out now

back in the 90s when i started driving i dont recall ever seeing a cracked tyre , they were just kept and used until worn out , ive had part worns /scrap yard finds and they just lasted until bald
Or like many things, greed takes hold. Hey, can we cut down a little on that expensive, vital additive? Save 8p per tyre. Maybe.

steveo3002

Original Poster:

10,987 posts

195 months

Saturday 9th August 2025
quotequote all
so email sent to demon tweeks who supplied them

has any one ever had replacements sorted? im guessing no chance but happy to be proved wrong

trickywoo

13,445 posts

251 months

Saturday 9th August 2025
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I’ve had Goodyear f1 crack worse than that albeit it took three years.

stevieturbo

17,916 posts

268 months

Sunday 10th August 2025
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vaud said:
Yes it’s unusual - they may have been badly stored before your purchase, etc. ask Demon Tweeks and then the manufacturer.
Tyres cracking these days is not unusual. There are hundreds of threads about it, all brands, all ages.

Well not really all ages, it never seemed to happen 10, 15, 20 years ago....even on 20 year old tyres

E-bmw

11,953 posts

173 months

Sunday 10th August 2025
quotequote all
stevieturbo said:
vaud said:
Yes it’s unusual - they may have been badly stored before your purchase, etc. ask Demon Tweeks and then the manufacturer.
Tyres cracking these days is not unusual. There are hundreds of threads about it, all brands, all ages.

Well not really all ages, it never seemed to happen 10, 15, 20 years ago....even on 20 year old tyres
Not an expert but, I believe it is down to the more "eco-friendly" formulas used on the compounds these days.

steveo3002

Original Poster:

10,987 posts

195 months

Sunday 10th August 2025
quotequote all
^ some eco friendly when almost new tyres need throwing away

E-bmw

11,953 posts

173 months

Sunday 10th August 2025
quotequote all
steveo3002 said:
^ some eco friendly when almost new tyres need throwing away
Yes, but isn't it always the way that manufacturers (for arguments sake) only look at that part of the full cycle of the product.

Another case in point, electric car owners only think about the fuel in the vehicle part of the full life-cycle of the product.

MustangGT

13,608 posts

301 months

Monday 11th August 2025
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journeymanpro said:
MustangGT said:
I would look at the date code on the tyre, they could be older than you think.
Did you read the op?
Not well enough, doh! Removed my post now.