Put the best tyres on the front or (surprisingly) the rear?

Put the best tyres on the front or (surprisingly) the rear?

Author
Discussion

LezLezLez

Original Poster:

14 posts

118 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
I have always put the best tyres on the front of any car I have owned, usually as a well matched pair. Often I cannot afford to replace 4 (or 5) tyres at once so I buy a new pair and put them on the front. Currently I am about to fit two new tyres using my local Kwik-Fit branch who have advised they now place best tyres on the rear as policy. They argued based on slip angles and the like under skid conditions. I will argue that front is best giving best steering precision, and stopping power. Has anyone else heard this "rear is best" argument and what is your opinion please?

832ark

1,226 posts

157 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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Yep, also recommended by tyre manufacturers, but hey, what do they know?

Sheepshanks

32,799 posts

120 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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LezLezLez said:
Has anyone else heard this "rear is best" argument
Yes

LezLezLez said:

what is your opinion please?
Depends who is driving. If only you are driving the car and you understand the risk, then do whatever you like.

If your teenage son is driving the car, then put the new tyres on the back.

anonymous-user

55 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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i have fwd and always put on front but never let rears get too low.

good tyres aren't a luxury, and if you can't afford drive slower.

Ares

11,000 posts

121 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
Good tyres on the back.

Understeer is far easier to deal with that oversteer.

Ean218

1,965 posts

251 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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I'm afraid it's dumbing down. No-one these days does skid pan training and so have no idea how to cope with oversteer.

My rears won't fit on the front so its academic anyway.

Sheepshanks

32,799 posts

120 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
Ean218 said:
My rears won't fit on the front so its academic anyway.
Didn't stop Costco trying on my car!

wemorgan

3,578 posts

179 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
If only we all knew how we are about to crash - skid on water, too fast around a bend etc etc, then we could all set off in the morning with the correct tyres.

caelite

4,274 posts

113 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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My last car (MG ZS V6) had bald rears for longer than I cared to admit. Chucking it into roundabouts sideways in the wet than planting your foot was hilarious after the first few terrifying times.

Not safe by any means, fronts wear quicker on a FWD but the backs are far more important (Depends whether you want the front washing out or extremely unpredictable oversteer.)

Janesy B

2,625 posts

187 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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The last time I put new tyres on the front but the rear had 7mm tread. I'd rather have slightly worn fronts than rears, I'd rather see the tree I am about to hit tongue out

thewildblue

351 posts

174 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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I always put the best on the front and drive accordingly. The front does the majority of the braking, it also does the steering. Plus I prefer oversteer to understeer...

DKS

1,678 posts

185 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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New on the rear, old rears on the front is the only way to get your moneys worth from the tread on FWD. Otherwise the tyre will perish long before it wears. I was in a car when a perished tyre with loads of tread popped on the back (of a Fiat Tipo) at motorway speeds. I learnt my lesson then!

Centurion07

10,381 posts

248 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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caelite said:
the backs are far more important...
Yeah, let's not worry about the fronts; they only do 100% of the steering and the VAST majority of the braking.

rofl

If you can't cope with oversteer and you're driving in such a manner as to cause the back end to step out then it doesn't matter which end the new tyres go on; you're going to crash sooner or later.

If you lose the front of a FWD car, which the majority of cars are these days, then generally speaking you just have to ease off the throttle and you'll regain control. If you lose the back then that requires an element of skill to be able to correct, a skill a lot of people just don't have. THAT is the only reason to fit new tyres to the back. Which brings us back to my first point.


Edited by Centurion07 on Thursday 21st January 18:05

MDMA .

8,901 posts

102 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
Rotate regular and replace 4 at a time. All matching.

Ares

11,000 posts

121 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
MDMA . said:
Rotate regular and replace 4 at a time. All matching.
Not if, like mine, your fronts are 245 and rear are 275 wink

jamieduff1981

8,025 posts

141 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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Centurion07 said:
Yeah, let's not worry about the fronts; they only do 100% of the steering and the VAST majority of the braking.

rofl

If you can't cope with oversteer and you're driving in such a manner as to cause the back end to step out then it doesn't matter which end the new tyres go on; you're going to crash sooner or later.

If you lose the front of a FWD car, which the majority of cars are these days, then generally speaking you just have to ease off the throttle and you'll regain control. If you lose the back then that requires an element of skill to be able to correct, a skill a lot of people just don't have. THAT is the only reason to fit new tyres to the back. Which brings us back to my first point.


Edited by Centurion07 on Thursday 21st January 18:05
No offence, but you have no idea what you're talking about.

Give your brain a chance for a moment, and consider what steering the car actually means.

The car has a centre of gravity somewhere close to the middle of its wheel base. According to Isaac Newton, who knew a bit more about physics than you do, a body in motion will continue in motion at constant velocity until acted upon by an external force. Velocity involves both speed and direction. To make the car change direction, a force needs to act upon its mass.

I'm sure you're familiar with shopping trolleys which have 4 castoring wheels. Applying a lateral force to the front of a moving trolley only yaws the trolley. It points in a different direction but continues moving in the same direction it was already going. The external force to change the velocity of the trolley must act through its CofG. Ergo there must be an accelerative force applied through the front and rear wheels.

It is thus 100% wrong to think 100% of steering is performed by the front wheels.

People with poor ability to comprehend multi-faceted problems tend to think linearly and see the front tyres as most important. Those who actually know what they're talking about know that it is absolutely vital that the car is stable. No point in having good brakes at the front if your car swaps ends under braking or cornering...

kambites

67,586 posts

222 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
Best standing water dispersion on the rear. Which isn't necessarily the same thing as the grippiest tyres in other situations.

If the back end aquaplanes, having control over the front is utterly meaningless because any attempt to use it to either steer or brake will cause the car to swap ends. At least if the rear wheels are on the ground, you maintain SOME braking force whilst keeping the car pointing forwards.

In practice on cars where I have the choice (ie where the tyres are all the same size front) I rotate the tyres front-to-back every few thousand miles and replace them all at once. Running different tyres in the summer and winter is a perfect time to do this. smile

Edited by kambites on Thursday 21st January 19:13

addz86

1,439 posts

187 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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I've always put the best on the front, nothing makes my arse clench faster than surprise understeer

jamieduff1981

8,025 posts

141 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
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addz86 said:
I've always put the best on the front, nothing makes my arse clench faster than surprise understeer
Surprise oversteer will.

I'm actually dismayed that this is even a discussion. It's been demonstrated fully by anyone who's opinion is worth listening to that stability outranks any other consideration.

The only reason not to put the best tyres on the is a death wish.

vikingaero

10,378 posts

170 months

Thursday 21st January 2016
quotequote all
Very 50/50.

On the one hand I can see the argument from the Tyre Industry in that best tyres to the rear will prevent oversteer.

On the other hand having the best tread at the front will disperse standing water better and provide better directional stability and braking in our temperate climate.

I'm erring towards the latter although I'm not discounting the tyre industry theory altogether. Why?

(1) The vast majority of crashes are front end crashes where someone has ploughed into an object. There's no point having best tyres on the back if you've crashed into the car in front because of a lapse in concentration when you've braked heavily in the wet on the motorway.

(2) Apocalyptic oversteer accidents are far less common than front end crashes. in some respects it's better to have the engineered front end absorb the impact and have deployment of airbags. Conversely the better tyres on the rear could aid stability.

(3) I feel it's partly a marketing trick from the tyre industry. Over the life of a car more tyres are sold. The reasoning: You buy a new car with 4 new tyres. After 20k the fronts are worn and the rears only 20% worn. You follow accepted practice and put the 20% worn rears on the front and the new tyres on the rear. Your front tyres only last 16k because they are the 20% worn ones. So you need new tyres sooner ad infinitum.