Whether they are antique tires, or new model car tires, racing tires or truck tires, when they are taken care of they last longer. This is true with everything. One of the first things you can check yourself is your driving speed, and whether you tend to take off with quick starts, turn corners at a high speed, or come to a screeching stop. All three of these habits will cause the tread on your tires to wear out extremely quickly. Another element of driving that will damage your tires, is not keeping your eyes out for potholes, or consistently hitting the curbs when parallel parking or pulling into parking spaces.
If you know that you will be regularly carrying heavy loads in vehicles such as work trucks, make sure that you adjust for that with either the kind of tires you buy or by the air pressure you keep your tires set at. All of the extensions and the valves on tires should be kept sealed, as this will ensure that moisture and/or dirt will not find its way into your tire. Check your tires often for debris such as small pieces of glass, metal or rocks that may become wedged into the tire’s tread. Even the heavy duty all purpose tires such as Nitto tires, will become easily damaged by hitting a bump when one of those bits of debris is already there, the bump could cause them to puncture the tire.
One thing that many people do when they find that they are stuck in mud, or sand, or even on ice, is that they spin their tires. Stepping on the gas is a first response, but it is actually a very dangerous response, as spinning the tires like that can actually cause them to explode. In colder weather, the tire will still create quite a bit of heat causing the temperature of the tire to elevate and pressure to build. In vehicles with extremely powerful engines, this can happen in about two to three seconds. Itdoesn ‘t take very long at all. Proper care of and proper attention paid to your tires will keep you safe and will ensure that your tires have a long life of optimum performance.