How many miles did your tyres last?

ksher

Lifer
 Bedfordshire
My Zed has done nearly 11,000 miles since June 2010. I checked the tyres today, and the tread depth is 5mm (front) and 4mm (rear). It is like a pair of Bridgestone RFT is needed very soon for the rear.

How many miles did your rear tyres last? The rear RFT on my previous E60 523i Sport lasted about 20k miles.
 
Hmmm, my mileage is a good bit lower than yours, although mine is just over 2 years old, but I've never checked the tyres. :oops: Is it recommended to let the tyres run right down to the legal limit... (1.6mm) ? How many miles are you covering for your daily commute, or is the wear just down to pleasure driving? :D
 
From home to office is 24 miles, i.e. 48 miles a day. Pleasure driving, all the times :oops: .

But I really think my two Z4 (E85 ane E89) have faster tyre wear, than other BMW I had before. Probably they make me drive more enthusiastically.

I am going to change them when the depth is 2mm.
 
I swapped mine over at 22,000 miles and the rears had 3mm left and the fronts 5mm, I' would have probably got 30,000 from the rears. Have now done 35,000 miles and there is still quite a bit of tread remaining, probably another 10,000, think the Bridgestones are a wee bit hard

Want to change all four for some continentals, if I said that the Bridgestones were poor, that would probably be the biggest understatement of the century
 
sars, you mean you swapped the fronts for the backs? I think you can only do that with the 17's where the fronts are the same as the backs... in terms of size :?

Will you go for Continental runflats, or "proper" tyres?
 
VvrooomM said:
Driving like a laaadyyy!!!

:rofl:

Of course i drive within the speed limit, apart from the time i ended up on the speed awareness course.

Just drive fast and smooth, no burnouts and hey, i'm in a 35i - what do i have to prove on the road :driving: :poke:

Apart from the odd head to head with my mates boxster i'm not one for flooring it, don't do track days and around these country lanes it's not cool to drive like a lunatic. I don't ever want to come round a bend and end up taking out riders on horses, people on bikes or other drivers so giving it some welly has to wait for the autobahn :)
 
Z4 Beemer said:
sars, you mean you swapped the fronts for the backs? I think you can only do that with the 17's where the fronts are the same as the backs... in terms of size :?

Will you go for Continental runflats, or "proper" tyres?

Yes I have the standard 17" wheels so they are the same, as I do 25,000 miles a year having 18" wheels, even if they do look pretty, add a lot of unnecessary cost. Current price for a continental rft for mine is £142 fitted, or £250 for the 18" rears

Will definitely keep the run flats, just not sure which brand to get, obviously excluding Bridgestone
 
I'm on 19" all round, have over 19K on the clock and the fronts have ages on them. Replaced the rears at 16K. £260 a tyre.

roofless, 23K on the rears...phew I just love that. :wink: ...just wish I could do that myself :wink:
 
sars said:
I swapped mine over at 22,000 miles and the rears had 3mm left and the fronts 5mm, I' would have probably got 30,000 from the rears. Have now done 35,000 miles and there is still quite a bit of tread remaining, probably another 10,000, think the Bridgestones are a wee bit hard

Want to change all four for some continentals, if I said that the Bridgestones were poor, that would probably be the biggest understatement of the century

BMW say non run flats will invalidate the warranty on any steering and suspension issues......
 
Nickm said:
sars said:
I swapped mine over at 22,000 miles and the rears had 3mm left and the fronts 5mm, I' would have probably got 30,000 from the rears. Have now done 35,000 miles and there is still quite a bit of tread remaining, probably another 10,000, think the Bridgestones are a wee bit hard

Want to change all four for some continentals, if I said that the Bridgestones were poor, that would probably be the biggest understatement of the century

BMW say non run flats will invalidate the warranty on any steering and suspension issues......

I shall continue to fit rft, just not those manufactured by Bridgestone
 
even though i tend to be

VvrooomM said:
Driving like a laaadyyy!!!

:lol:

i do eventually get through tyres and when i will need to change them again this issue of warranty etc raises one question, does anyone have any experience of runflats other than the bridgestones and what would you recommend? other than non run flats :)
 
roofless said:
even though i tend to be

VvrooomM said:
Driving like a laaadyyy!!!

:lol:

I do eventually get through tyres and when i will need to change them again this issue of warranty etc raises one question, does anyone have any experience of runflats other than the bridgestones and what would you recommend? other than non run flats :)

Starting to think about this myself, have probably another 6 months wear left in them, choice seems to be between

1. Continental Sport Contact 2 SSR (RFT)
2. Pirelli PZero (RFT)
3. Yokohama Advan Sport V103S (RFT)
4. Michelin Pilot Primacy HP (RFT)
5. Michelin Pilot Sport 2 (RFT)
6. Bridgestone RE050A (RFT)

These are for 17" & 18" wheels, any comments or advice?
 
Nickm said:
BMW say non run flats will invalidate the warranty on any steering and suspension issues......

That's interesting as I asked my dealer flat out about fitting non run flats, and they said there were no warranty issues, it was all about the safety and the fact the cars were designed to run them. They said I can fit them if I chose to without comeback. I pressed them on the warranty angle and they confirmed (both reps I was talking with) that warranty would be unaffected.
 
Z4 Beemer said:
So, is there less chance of 19" rims cracking if we go for non-RFT tyres?

I don't think there's enough evidence to say one way or another. I'm using my own intelligence (!?) to think about how impact waves travel, and I would have thought, as the wheels seem to crack where the tyres meet the inner rim, that by absorbing impact energy in the tyre this can only lead to less energy reaching the wheel. Happy to be proven wrong, but most believe that the hard sidewalls on RFT's pass along the impact energy and make the wheel flex more, which results in failure ultimately.
 
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