Tire age

The amount of tread left on a tire has absolutely no bearing on whether or not it’s any good. An 8 year old tire with 0 miles on it is still garbage. Rubber oxidizes, it deteriorates just sitting around.

Modern tires are a complex blend of polymers. The ingredients that keep the rubber flexible and "sticky" are the ones that tend to dry out and disappear over time. That's why you start seeing fine cracks in the sidewalls, and why you lose traction. Eventually you wind up with something like the 50-year-old spare in my trunk (since replaced) — zero road miles, but it's as hard and shiny as a billiard ball. I think your tires are telling you "it's time".

This. Tires now are not the same as tires from the 70’s. Or the 80’s. Or even the 90’s. Compounds have been greatly improved in terms of performance, and those changes in compounds and composition mean they don’t age like they did 30 years ago. Better performance, shorter lifespan.

OK fellas, I posted up there ^^^^ about buying new tires for Gladys in 2015. I had a blowout today. Tires still have a little over half tread left. I didn't run over anything. Just a blowout. So watch your tires.Yeah and it slap blows, pun intended. Now I gotta 80 buck tow bill PLUS gotta find another tire. Dammit all.

You're right. But I tell you what. I ain't replacing these tires on the Escape. They still have over 3/4 tread left. That's crazy.

Again, the amount of tread has no bearing on condition.

If you treated all your tires the same and there was no “event” that caused the blowout, the only rational conclusion you can make is that the other 3 tires are in exactly the same condition as the one that came apart. Meaning, they’re all garbage just waiting to fail.

Remember the Firestone recall that’s now decades back? Tire date stamping was improved after that to better track tire age, because it was literally killing people. In explorers no less.

The 7 year tire life expectancy is a money related deal, absolutely, but not like most people think as a gimmick to sell more tires. After that, the lawsuits and payouts to family members exceed what the tire companies and car manufacturers want to pay. It’s a liability issue, not a sales tactic. That’s also why some car manufacturers will tell you 6 years, a few of the car manufacturers are even going shorter than the tire manufacturers are. It’s lawsuits, not tire sales.

And if your tire shop will sell you a single tire, they’re sketchy as hell. No reputable tire shop should sell you less than a pair. And if they get that car in and see the age of the tires, they shouldn’t sell you less than 4, or let you leave without buying tires or signing a waiver. Sending your customers out on outdated tires, one of which has already failed, isn’t good service.