Sparky1337
Well-Known Member
Depends on how bad the camber is. If the vehicle is stock I’d agree. Toe and go is pretty effective.Toe wears tires not camber. Get it aligned.
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Depends on how bad the camber is. If the vehicle is stock I’d agree. Toe and go is pretty effective.Toe wears tires not camber. Get it aligned.
Thanks, yes, I checked that they were symmetric.Before you reverse the tires, make sure they're not asymmetric, i.e. marked "inside" & "outside" on the sidewall.
Also, inner tread wear is usually the result of the toe setting.
Good point. We likely won't be driving it at night when it's really cold, but it there still might be some cold mornings.They’ll be slick and greasy feeling. Even if you aren’t stupid you won’t be able to make an emergency maneuver comfortably. It’s not you, it’s other people and their actions that can make situations bad.
I was planning on it when I get the new tires. I just didn't think the alignment could be that bad already.Toe wears tires not camber. Get it aligned.
I know people running -3 degrees on the street with no real tire wear. They do like to corner.Depends on how bad the camber is.
Factory alignment is hit or miss, mostly miss.I was planning on it when I get the new tires. I just didn't think the alignment could be that bad already.
Right but is the alignment off or is this normal wear due to the factory alignment settings?Factory alignment is hit or miss, mostly miss.
These cars are not factory camber adjustable. It's toe.
Depends on the tires. Some brands, I'd have to search to tell you which ones, will have internal failures, and you can ruin the tires in cold temps.
Just get all seasons and play it safe. No sense in the risk if it's easily mitigated.
Thanks, makes sense, I guess I'll go this route, better safe than sorry. I just got a new jack that should make changes easier; maybe now I can finally pretend I need an impact wrench!I would definitely use 2 sets, as summers below 40 becomes pretty like a hockey puck. Yes they will warm up a bit when drive but not enough to be safe in my opinion, and if you hit water temp will go back down and the fact our Mustang are light on the backend and high power makes this very slippery. even with summer when it rains I put my in wet/snow mode and still will have something a little wheel spin with light pedal touch.
just my opinion, sadly for me the mustang will stay in the garage from November to April
I was actually just thinking about this on my morning dog walk. I moved from northern Utah to southern Utah so it's a little warmer than you though. My original plan was to track the car a little. But then I moved far away from any track, so I will probably never do that. So for just street driving I don't need something too aggressive, wider all seasons would probably provide the extra traction I am looking for. I ran DSW on my car up north, because the weather was so crazy; we could get snow anytime between October and April, but also 70 degrees in February.I'm in northern Nevada, so our weather is similar to yours. My recommendation is to save money, time and storage space. Get yourself a set of good all season tires (Michelin AS4 or Continental DWS06+) and a proper alignment and you won't be sorry. I did this (and new wheels) when mine had only 100 miles on it, and it's been over 20,000 miles of nothing but happy motoring since then.
If the factory did the alignment properly it won't wear tiresRight but is the alignment off or is this normal wear due to the factory alignment settings?
I was actually just thinking about this on my morning dog walk. I moved from northern Utah to southern Utah so it's a little warmer than you though...