What causes the inside of a wheel to wear faster than the outside?

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plucky duck
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What causes the inside of a wheel to wear faster than the outside?

Post by plucky duck »

This is on the left-front driver side wheel. The inside is already bald, when the outside still has some thread left? Any ideas what could be causing this fellas? Estimated cost to fix? Thx.

Plucky
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Nutster_98
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Post by Nutster_98 »

If no front end parts are bad, I would start with a alignment. About $25-30 dollars depending on where you live.





Nut
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Viperoni
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Post by Viperoni »

Ricers with cut springs have this problem :p :D :D ;)

An alignment should fix it, otherwise I'm not sure :(
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plucky duck
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Post by plucky duck »

My boat ain't no ricer!! BTW, her name's Bonnie :) Short for Bonneville :P

~$40 isn't too bad, better than I had expected. Freakin POC is going back to the garage, for the however many times now :(
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Viperoni
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Post by Viperoni »

Pluck I was kidding ya :p :D
There's something else that *might* be the problem....it *could* be a ball joint or a tie rod end, so tell the guys to check those out too.
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Hipnotic_Tranz
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Post by Hipnotic_Tranz »

Couldn't it be something as simple as over-inflation?
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Viperoni
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Post by Viperoni »

Nope, overinflationg would wear only the center of your tire silly :P
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Post by Hipnotic_Tranz »

Well, thats what I got out of it when he said:

"<i>The inside is already bald, when the outside still has some thread left</i>"

The "inside" being the center and the "outside" being the edges. :)
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Post by Viperoni »

I always thought inside meant engine side and outside meant not-engine-side??
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Post by Hipnotic_Tranz »

haha, who knows--he wasn't specific really. Eitherway you're probably right cause I dont know much about cars. When people talk about wearing tires they probably refer them the way you do and I just didn't know :)
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Post by Viperoni »

Actually the thing that caught my attention is the left front; that's where the driver is, so it's usually the one that'd be most susceptible to a weak spring/shock or something along those lines.
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Post by KennyH »

It is called negative camber. Check the passenger side inside also. An alignment is in order here :D
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