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Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Penumbra

Hello.

Do any of you own a Mk 2 cmax (petrol engine) from about 2014 onwards. If so what is front tyre wear like? A friend is selling his and told me it just had 2 new front tyres and pads at 15,000 miles which seems a bit premature to me.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - badbusdriver

Doesn't seem too bad to me, but how the car is driven can affect that quite a lot.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - HGV ~ P Valentine

www.cmaxownersclub.co.uk/forum/threads/heavy-front...t

Don't know the car but the link goes to an owners forum, average seems about 8k.

It does depend on how you drive it and the quality of the tyre, most trucks I have driven use continental, but the internet is full of info. Anyway to avoid premature tyre wear you might want to think about the following.

1 . Incorrect tyre pressure can cause tyres to wear out.

2 . Tracking/wheel alignment etc

3 . Carrying too much speed on corners.

4 . Harsh braking

6 . Aggressive acceleration.

7 . Poor suspension.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Penumbra

I realise that there are many variables, but from my own experience (rotating tyres round etc) from different cars over the last 10 years, that 25,000 would be nearer the mark.

8000 miles ..... blimey, I'd be very very grumpy changing my tyres at that mileage!

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Engineer Andy

Indeed, especially for a car closely related to the Ford Focus and Mazda3 (my car), and don't recall either having an issues with premature tyre wear for non-sporty (i.e. not ST/RS/MPS) models. I don't recall the Mazda5 (again, closely related) having such issues, at leas to that degree that it was mentioned in a discussion thread.

My Mazda certainly doesn't, having got 40k+ and 25k out of both my previous sets of tyres, changing the first because of age (6yo), poor wet grip and noise (both due to age), and the second due to age (again, 6yo [as per HJ's previous recommendations], nothing wrong otherwise) and because my alloys needed changing and going from 16in to 15in for both was considerably cheaper. I probably could've got well over 50k miles out of both sets, having only worn the first down to just under half way and the second to 2/3rds.

8k miles sounds terrible - normally, as other say, I'd associate that (especially if the brake pads were changed at the same time) with an aggressive driving, but if the other forum is to be belived, then maybe the differences in that model of car do seem to make all the difference. Odd if it did though.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Andrew-T

I realise that there are many variables, but from my own experience (rotating tyres round etc) from different cars over the last 10 years, that 25,000 would be nearer the mark.

Yes I have needed new sets after 25-30K on my Pug 207. I feel a bit short-changed as I recall getting about 50K on a set with 205s, but they were lighter cars - but with smaller wheels, which one might expect to wear faster?

I'm sure hustling through roundabouts doesn't help, and there are all those speed bumps, not to mention potholes, to consider.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Engineer Andy

Seems to be a given that lower profile tyres wear faster than higher profile ones, even if the driving style and mileage is similar. Maybe all that extra air in the higher profile ones (matched with smaller diameter wheels) helps absorb more energy when traversing speed humps, including the pimple type ones.

It does sound like in this case a specific issue with the model of car, given there isn't one (or anywhere near as bad) with similar cars based on the same platform.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Andrew-T

Seems to be a given that lower profile tyres wear faster than higher profile ones, even if the driving style and mileage is similar. Maybe all that extra air in the higher profile ones (matched with smaller diameter wheels) helps absorb more energy when traversing speed humps, including the pimple type ones.

Accepting that wear is greater on a lower-profile tyre, perhaps a deeper sidewall is helping to spread the stress, rather than the mass of air inside?

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - Engineer Andy

Probably a combination of both, providing extra shock absorbtion, and why the suspension should last longer as well.

Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - SLO76
Almost entirely down to the driver and the type of tyre. It could be as little as 5,000 if they’re heavy on the gas out of corners and junctions or 50,000 as the tyres on my Honda CRV were on target to reach. I did swap front to rear at the mid Point though to extend their life but I’d say they would’ve hit close to 40k without.
Mk 2 CMax - Mk 2 CMax front tyre wear - bathtub tom

Would suggest to me the previous owner was heavy on the steering and particularly heavy on the brakes, unless the garage was having them over.