Mr. Incredible
G80 gone, still a Hyundai owner. 2021 Palisade
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2018
- Messages
- 3,468
- Reaction score
- 1,745
- Points
- 113
- Genesis Model Year
- 2018
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G80 Sport
Just curious... How did this car end up needing a set of rear tires at 16k miles?
so if you read from the beginning, the car was driven supposedly by a manager when we leased it so there were 2728 miles on it - he abused that car and that is why the tires needed replacing!
unless this manager sat and roasted the tires, I doubt any "abuse" he did in 3,000 miles had any effect on the life of the tires.
Since you don't state which model of vehicle or tire you had, the 18" Michelin tires for the 2015 3.8 RWD Hyundai Genesis have 20,000 mile warranty, The Dunlop's had NO mileage warranty, only coverage for the tires for 1 year if they wore below 2/32 within that time,
Which means depending on the road conditions and the environment overall 16,000 miles is about right for the tires to be worn to the point of needing to be replaced under the terms of the lease. Maybe not if you had kept the vehicle, but for the lease, yes.
people seem to think that OEM tires should last forever, and the plain truth is all manufacturers put the cheapest crap on their cars they can get to keep the costs down and the profit margins high. I haven't owned a vehicle in 18 years that didn't need to have the OEM tires replaced before 20K.
Bottom line is that you as the leasee are required to make sure the vehicle is returned within the parameters of the lease agreement, which clearly spelled out what tire tread depth was acceptable and what was not.
I have leased many vehicles in 35 years, and I have always known I had to replace the tires prior to turning it in, it is the cost of leasing over purchasing. Hell my wife's Camry lease is up in 2 months and we have already replaced the tires, grant it was due to both rears blowing out and shredding into pieces at 12K miles, the first one went, I put on the spare for her, and less than a mile later the second went. All 4 got replaced, but even if that had not happened, the tires would have been replaced prior to turning the car back in because they were already showing excess wear @ 12K.
and frankly I will never understand someone replacing only 2 tires, the tires are what connect you to the road, and also what enables your vehicle to stop. When you replace the tires for wear, you replace all of them so that you have balanced traction and stopping power.
IMO and call me an ass if you want, you tried to get away with saving a couple of bucks by doing the least amount you thought was required and Hyundai called you on it.
Truth is you could have put some cheap ass $100 per tire, tires on the car and avoided all of this and it would have cost you the same, minus the headache, aggravation, complaining, and finger pointing.