Tire rotation on E550...need a straight answer
Pleaae let let me know as I have an appointment at 4:00pm eastern time to drop the car off at the tire shop.
Andy
Now whether you can rotate side to side depends on if they are directional or not. This is a good link to the basics of directional tires: https://www.tirebuyer.com/education/directional-tires
If the tires are not directional, you can rotate side to side and front to back. If they are directional, then its only front to back.
My 1985 Mustang GT had the Goodyear Gatorbacks on it and I remember those were directional. I don’t believe the Sumitomo HTR A/S PO2 tires I have are directional.

Good luck
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My 1985 Mustang GT had the Goodyear Gatorbacks on it and I remember those were directional. I don’t believe the Sumitomo HTR A/S PO2 tires I have are directional.
Goodyear Gatorbacks….. good stuff.
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People who do not understand this and think it is only the tyre size that matters can cause people all sorts of issues.




And now the topic is derailed!
Last edited by RA72825; Sep 25, 2018 at 11:32 AM.




For the tire to lose grip on the road under the 550 engine, that I also have, it would need to be ridiculously narrower. Friction force between tire and road does not really depend on the width of the tire as the formula for the fiction force simply is "F=c x Fn" where c is the friction coefficient between the tire and road and Fn is the force between them two surfaces. If the narrower and wider tires are made of the same rubber material with the same properties it does not matter how wide the tire is. Wider tires provide longer run times as there simply is more rubber to wear off. Racing car tires are soft so they have good grip but they wear fast and to battle this the tires are made wide.
If the tire is too narrow it can break apart under the power/force from our big engines but the tires we can use under our cars are way wider for that.
What??? Neither point makes sense.




Friction force is just a simple calculation of multiplying friction coefficient with the force between the surfaces.
Need for wider tires comes from the strength of the rubber to handle the force. If too narrow the rubber will break apart under the force.
This same goes with tire diameter as with bigger diameter the tire has bigger area against road so it does not break as easy as smaller tire.
Then another topic is to talk about the mechanical grip against the pavement, which has everything to do with the softness or hardness of the rubber.
Point 2 implies that a wider tire lasts longer because there is more rubber to wear off. That would be true if tread depth was more in the wider tire which typically isn’t true. Sorry if I read your point wrong.




Point 2 implies that a wider tire lasts longer because there is more rubber to wear off. That would be true if tread depth was more in the wider tire which typically isn’t true. Sorry if I read your point wrong.






