Yip exactly. I have an X6 and when you start reading about it it can worry you a bit. A set of tyres for the X6 is pretty much £900+.enuff_zed said:Nictrix said:This is more of an issue with 4 wheel drive cars with staggered tyre fitments as the transfer boxes struggle to cope with different tyre diameters and can prematurely knacker the box. The tyres being star marked mean that the tolerances in the diameters are smaller.strugglinauthor said:Ok, I had a long chat with a very helpful guy in Goodyear's technical team and I have an answer. I wasn't aware that BMW approved tyres are 'star marked'. Now whether this means that all Bridgestone RE05s are star marked or you specifically have to ask for them to be, I've no idea. Anyway, the Goodyears I fitted are not star marked. What this all means is that within the international standards on tyre construction a small margin of tolerance is allowed on tyre sizes and we're talking a few mm here. With star marked tyres the sizes are exact. The guy said that the software in all but the very newest BMWs can get upset when the tyre is not star marked and so, presumably, could be fractionally smaller or larger. As far as the software is concerned the tyres are not travelling at the correct speed and so it detects a skid situation.
The only solution, which is what I kinda expected, is to switch back to a star marked tyre or, to be safe, a Bridgestone RE05. The guy agreed that matching the fronts with the rear Goodyears should help to fool the software. He said that if other Z4 owners have done this successfully then I'm likely to be OK, but he couldn't guarantee it.
So there you go. Looks like I'll have to go with Plan B and switch the rears back to Bridgestone.
If anyone would like to buy some Eagle F1s with a about 100 miles on them then let me know!![]()
That's interesting. My daily 335d X-drive may be susceptible to this then, but as 90% of the time most of the drive is to the rear wheels, surely they would wear faster and then the mismatch in diameters should cause an issue? All sounds a bit 'smoke and mirrors' to me, but then I'm no car mechanic :?
The transfer box can tolerate small differences in the rolling diameter between the front and rear tyres which would cater for some tyre wear but rumours say any more than 2-3mm difference in tread on star marked tyres can also lead to problems.
If you have a car under BMWs warranty and use non star marked tyres they will apparently knock back any warranty claims for the drive train.
Its obviously a known issue to them but outside of BMW people will advise to fit 4 tyres at the same time to limit the possibility of transfer box problems. Rear diff problems I think is another issue something to do with diff wind up.
Theres a member on the Xdrivers forum that rebuilds transfer boxes and as far as he has said its almost a wear and tear item.