SafeSpeed wrote:
IanH wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
IanH wrote:
People need to know that these are not safe at speed, especially on the front wheel. My advice would be, if you have to replace a front tyre, stick a rear tyre on the front and put the space saver on the back.
I can see good arguments for being concerned about a space saver on either axle.
I guess the front would be worse in some cases (front heavy front wheel drive small cars) and the rear would be worse on more powerful rear wheel drive cars. Then there's the failure mode - most drivers are less likely to survive oversteer than understeer.
So why are you so firm about the axle Ian?
They are less likely to have been checked for pressure, they get stuck on when needed, and off you go. For the remainder of the journey the driver forgets he's using a space saver, he pushes the speed up to 70, 75, 80, the tyre starts to overheat then blows. My understanding is that a front tyre blow out is much less predictable than a rear tyre, and can cause much more radical course deviation.
Thats' excellent general advice about spare tyre care, but your (valid) concerns have little or nothing to do with the fact that it's a space saver do they?
In fact a full size underinflated spare might be worse because it
doesn't come with a speed warning.
Good point, Paul.
The point about the change to the rear axle I believe is relevant for any tyre, not just space savers.
But a properly maintained spare is good for the speed its coded for, the space saver is coded at 50, so a good full size spare will be better than a good space saver spare at 85mph.
So if you do choose to, or forget, and drive your space saver at 85, I'd rather it was on the rear axle.
Having just had a glance at JT's post, I'm happy to learn from the wise, but it's my instinctive advice from some experience of blowout RTCs that good tyres would be better on the front. I've had rear blowouts, and hardly noticed them, although not at speed. You always notice the front blowout.
But I'm getting used to the idea that the obvious advice might not be right, so I'm all ears.
