Tire Rotation of F-Sport
#3
now if you have the F Sport AWD, you'll more than likely have all season tires which may or may not have asymmetric or symmetric tires. my guess is you do, and are able to rotate side to side, front to back and diagonally because the width is all the same (f and r are 8 wide).
#4
So with stock tires on the IS 350 FSport AWD, you can rotate them?
If it's a staggered set up, the front tires probably wear out faster than the rears, at that point do you replace all four tires or just the front?
If it's a staggered set up, the front tires probably wear out faster than the rears, at that point do you replace all four tires or just the front?
Last edited by proview3r; 03-09-15 at 11:36 AM.
#5
Lexus Test Driver
I think its reverse for mid/high powered RWD cars. The rears tend to go out faster. My G35 (notorious for tire wear) could go through rears at 14k and fronts at 20k.
#6
again it depends on driving style, application, and conditions. i'm hitting almost 20k and still have plenty of tread on my RWD 350.
I can't recall but i'm pretty sure i remember reading the AWD is all season, which most typically are symmetrical/asymmetrical tires. if this is the case, yes, you can rotate them in the three combinations i mentioned--but again this can only be done if you meet the two conditions, your four wheel widths are the same, and the tires are sym/asym. if staggered (RWD), with sym/asym tires, you can only rotate side to side bc the fronts have the same widths and the rears share the same widths.
#7
this is because there is more power being put on the rear tires, thus they'll go quicker. the tires have two purposes depending on the type of drive (FWD, RWD, AWD), but in essence, the wheels/tires are suppose to steer as well as make contact with the road. the axle(s) which generate the power, those tires will have suffer the effects and wear quickly. on RWD cars the rears will fade quicker than the front because the rear axle and tires are where it accelerates the car. the front suffer not by much, unless you induce massive understeer (and oversteer possibly) constantly. in the FWD car, the fronts take a beating because it does double duty of steering and propelling the car. awd will give you an even effect though most are still biased towards the rear, but this depends on the power distribution, though most AWD cars send most of the power to the rear.
again it depends on driving style, application, and conditions. i'm hitting almost 20k and still have plenty of tread on my RWD 350.
I can't recall but i'm pretty sure i remember reading the AWD is all season, which most typically are symmetrical/asymmetrical tires. if this is the case, yes, you can rotate them in the three combinations i mentioned--but again this can only be done if you meet the two conditions, your four wheel widths are the same, and the tires are sym/asym. if staggered (RWD), with sym/asym tires, you can only rotate side to side bc the fronts have the same widths and the rears share the same widths.
again it depends on driving style, application, and conditions. i'm hitting almost 20k and still have plenty of tread on my RWD 350.
I can't recall but i'm pretty sure i remember reading the AWD is all season, which most typically are symmetrical/asymmetrical tires. if this is the case, yes, you can rotate them in the three combinations i mentioned--but again this can only be done if you meet the two conditions, your four wheel widths are the same, and the tires are sym/asym. if staggered (RWD), with sym/asym tires, you can only rotate side to side bc the fronts have the same widths and the rears share the same widths.
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#11
In Canada, the 350 AWD get staggered Bridgestone Turanza EL400, they're symmetric so I guess you can rotate them left to right. But I doubt that will do anything unless your alignment is completely messed.
#12
if your fronts are around 50% to get the most out of the fronts even more, rotate the fronts side to side every 3-5k miles. this way it'll wear more evenly. since we drive on the right lane in the US, the majority of our turns are right turns, right on ramps, right off ramps, thus the left tire takes a lot of the beating. the ensure its balanced, rotate often. i know, i know, if you don't have your own lift and air tools, its a pain the a$$. i just went out to home depot and bought a ryobi impact driver (and drill combo $100) and some 1/2 inch deep impact sockets ($20) and a 1/4 to 1/2 inch socket extender ($7) and a torque wrench (sale $40) to help make the process simpler and faster . most sedans the wheels are torqued at 80-100 lbs. i think the combo driver is up to 125lbs., and another individually sold driver up to 200 lbs. anyways, the combo driver should be enough. see video below..
#13
Lexus Test Driver
if the front still have 50% tread or more then you can still use them, just replace the rears. if less than 50% you won't have much mileage left so you might as well replace all of them now.
if your fronts are around 50% to get the most out of the fronts even more, rotate the fronts side to side every 3-5k miles. this way it'll wear more evenly. since we drive on the right lane in the US, the majority of our turns are right turns, right on ramps, right off ramps, thus the left tire takes a lot of the beating. the ensure its balanced, rotate often. i know, i know, if you don't have your own lift and air tools, its a pain the a$$. i just went out to home depot and bought a ryobi impact driver (and drill combo $100) and some 1/2 inch deep impact sockets ($20) and a 1/4 to 1/2 inch socket extender ($7) and a torque wrench (sale $40) to help make the process simpler and faster . most sedans the wheels are torqued at 80-100 lbs. i think the combo driver is up to 125lbs., and another individually sold driver up to 200 lbs. anyways, the combo driver should be enough. see video below..
Ryobi 18V Li-Ion Cordless Electric Impact Driver Remove Lug Nuts - YouTube
Ryobi 18V Li-Ion Impact Driver and Drill Unboxing - YouTube
if your fronts are around 50% to get the most out of the fronts even more, rotate the fronts side to side every 3-5k miles. this way it'll wear more evenly. since we drive on the right lane in the US, the majority of our turns are right turns, right on ramps, right off ramps, thus the left tire takes a lot of the beating. the ensure its balanced, rotate often. i know, i know, if you don't have your own lift and air tools, its a pain the a$$. i just went out to home depot and bought a ryobi impact driver (and drill combo $100) and some 1/2 inch deep impact sockets ($20) and a 1/4 to 1/2 inch socket extender ($7) and a torque wrench (sale $40) to help make the process simpler and faster . most sedans the wheels are torqued at 80-100 lbs. i think the combo driver is up to 125lbs., and another individually sold driver up to 200 lbs. anyways, the combo driver should be enough. see video below..
Ryobi 18V Li-Ion Cordless Electric Impact Driver Remove Lug Nuts - YouTube
Ryobi 18V Li-Ion Impact Driver and Drill Unboxing - YouTube
#15
Lexus Test Driver
I didn't pay that much attention when we picked this one up - if the tires are not directional, will probably just switch back and forth like Savy's suggesting.