Saturday 20 November 2010

Baywatch: What Makes A Good Car Tyre Bay?

We’ve all driven past them. Tyre bays might offer the best prices, two car tyres for the price of one, special deals on four-tyre sets and all manner of other tempting offers. This is, of course, just advertising and, as Joseph E Levine said, “You can fool all the people all the time if the advertising is right and the budget is big enough.” Now, it’s true that car tyres are often a distress purchase but even so, knowing what makes is good tyre bay is knowledge worth having.

So, what makes a good tyre bay? The answer is a two-word one: products and services. Here, it is not only the range of products and services but their quality that matters. Here’s what to look for in your car tyre-buying expeditions.

It’s obvious that a tyre bay is there to sell you car tyres. What you need to know first is whether the tyre bay is going to sell you new tyres. If you can, take a look at the stock on the shelves – you’re looking for the DOT codes. If this has three digits, walk away – four-digit codes came in after the year 2000. The way to read a four-digit code is easy to understand. The first two figures represent a particular week in the year denoted by the last two figures. So, a tyre marked 5009 was made very near the end of 2009. Car tyres have a six-year shelf life – and you can always check the tyres’ age before they’re fitted.

Speaking of tyre fitting, tyre bays have this down to a fine art. Given that car wheels and tyres live in a grimy environment, some grubbiness is acceptable even in a good tyre bay. However, untidiness should be frowned upon. If the tool cabinets are well organised, they’re liable to be well equipped. Similarly, tidy floors and a lack of overflowing bins and dead tyres underfoot denote an efficient workshop.

Wheel alignment is a service offered by many tyre bays. The days of the old Dunlop optical alignment gauge, effective though it was, are long gone. If you see computerised, four-wheel geometry wheel alignment, maybe with the involvement of measurement using lasers, you can rest assured that you’re in a good tyre bay. Remember that poor wheel alignment is a car-tyre eater.

Much the same goes for wheel balancing, which is an essential part of tyre fitting. On unbalanced tyre/wheel combinations, car tyres work less well and wear out faster. In the (very) old days, a balancing kit that involved sitting a wheel and tyre on top of a milk bottle was touted. Computerised wheel balancing is the norm nowadays – accept nothing less.

Many tyre bays are no longer transfixed, work-wise. Putting the tyre fitting and wheel balancing machinery into a van, along with an air compressor, equals mobile tyre fitting. You may take advantage of this service and some tyre bays offer a ‘call and inspect’ service, particularly for car fleet operators.

While there are other services offered by tyre bays, such as air-conditioning checks, the above suggest that a tyre bay offering these goods and services is up-to-date as well as on the ball. This in turn suggests that one very important element of tyre supply and fitment will be available and reliable. Never forget that the staff in a good tyre bay can advise you about choosing the best car tyres for your needs.

Merityre are a leading UK independent supplier of car tyres. Why not visit their website at www.merityre.co.uk and see where you can buy your next set of tyres.