Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.
Haven’t had much time to deal with it, going to give it another try today. I have the SCS Ray10 wheels.Still no luck huh, did you try having them balanced with the lug adapter?
Have you had the wheels checked to see if they're an issue? Assuming you swapped from stock wheels to aftermarket recently....what wheels are you running?
The tire shop said that this was just about all their business, becsuse the online company always has issues. I was told that even though the tire was a good name brand, that the online company bought the cheepest of the tires and the tire companies would send them tires with issues for less money.
There is a lot of omission in this post so it makes it hard for me to understand what may be the root cause of the problem in your case but I will say it is generally true if you buy a tire that is also OEM for a car or truck, then you are getting the lower grade of what they make because the best tires go to OEM first because OEM will reject it if the tire doesn't meet their own internal specs (uniformity, conicity, balance, etc). Doesn't matter if you buy it online or from Discount Tire...they both get the lower end tires.
Can you elaborate on this? Who are you claiming is the OEM in this scenario, Lexus or Falken?
If Lexus, I find it difficult to believe they inspect individual tires as quality control and am unaware of a tire grade rating that comes with tires that they could order based off.
If Falken, I also just don't follow as Falken doesn't sell tires direct. In fact, Discount Tire is one of their few approved online retailers. You'd be claiming Falken is sending their approved vendors lower grade tires?
Just trying to understand more about the rubber industry.
I was talking about the tire suppliers but I can not call out individual OEM tire suppliers on this forum (or anywhere) in regards to my earlier post. I did not do that back then, and I am not going to now.
Lexus definitely would require whomever supplies the tire/wheel assembly to them to measure each one for uniformity and balance to make sure it meets spec except maybe spares.
I'm happy to be wrong, but from my experiences and understanding, there's no way a tire Lexus puts on a vehicle aren't from the same QC approved pile of tires you buy at approved vendor stores.
Interesting.
I think I also spot my disconnect from your original point. I was thinking you were making the case for getting new tires at the dealership to avoid headache because the dealership replaced worn tires with a superior grade tire versus other suppliers.
I believe you’re just speaking to the tire supply standard from initial production by the vehicle manufacturer, or do you also mean at the dealerships level, they get only tires that meet that elevated Toyota standard for even replacement sets?
My apologies if what I am saying didn't really contribute to this thread. I was just speaking of tire standards as shipped to auto manufacturers but every one is different. Some may not even have internal standards. I know Toyota Lexus does for sure.
To be honest. I don't know what the Toyota dealerships get in comparison to retail markets like Discount Tire when it comes down to just the tire itself. Wheel obviously has to be OEM service parts. I think the dealerships get their tires either from the port distributor or perhaps DealerTire.
I’ve only had my st maxx tires on for a few days, but they have been better than expected. They’ve done great on wet roads and did very well in deep sand.Fixed! Got some USA made Coopers! Never again Falken!