It won't be doing the centre diff any favours.
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						I would never usually do this, however, my sons D3 has come back from the crash repairer with two new rear tyres.
We did have road tyres on all wheels.
Now they have replaced the rear ones with ATs.
I know that this is a definite problem with all wheel drive cars, such as Subaru, Nissan etc.
I’m not sure whether it’s such an issue with the Discovery 3.
anyone have any experience in this?
Cheers
Stu
It won't be doing the centre diff any favours.
If you don't like trucks, stop buying stuff.
If they are on the same axle it isn't so bad as long as they are the same size, width and aspect ratio.
There will always be slight differences between brands and wear between tires.
MY08 TDV6 SE D3- permagrin ooh yeah
2004 Jayco Freedom tin tent
1998 Triumph Daytona T595
1974 VW Kombi bus
1958 Holden FC special sedan
ON the Subaru Forester, which is a permanent all-wheel-drive, the following is stated in the owners manual: "You must install four tires that are of the same size, circumference, construction, manufacturer, brand (tread pattern), degree of wear, speed symbol and load index. Mixing tires of different types, sizes or degrees of wear can result in damage to the vehicle’s power train. "
I believe this should be the case with the Land Rovers to preserve the differentials from excessive heat build-up.
As Dave Ashcroft says, the centre diff is the weak point of the LT230. It will, of course, be compensating most of the time, but apparently it does not like constantly "favouring one end".
That said, plenty of people change tyres at one end of the car at a time. Usually though they merely replace them like for like, size wise.
JayTee
Nullus Anxietus
Cancer is gender blind.
2000 D2 TD5 Auto: Tins
1994 D1 300TDi Manual: Dave
1980 SIII Petrol Tray: Doris
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 Wizard
					
					
						Supporter
					
					
						Wizard
					
					
						SupporterI guess the easiest thing to do is the 'dad' thing and with your son take the vehicle back to the shop and insist on matching road tyres. Or get the front changed to the same ATs. Depends on what your son likes doing with the car I guess. You want uniform performance.
Given the on road performance capacity of the D3/4 (when they run) ATs may not be up to the same standard of road tyres.
Your current mix may not be a good look aesthetically, and not what you would have wanted given choice.
What did the insurance company specify? What is the garage's reasoning?
Do you still have the owners manual to clarify things, maybe check your motor vehicle registry for the rules on tyres, before approaching the garage.
With new vs worn there will be differentiation beyond 'the norm' but not excessive. The differentiation will be within an engineered tolerance, you would think.
Off the cuff, there may be a need for exact diameters in some cases where heat is not desirable. Some smaller all wheel drive vehicles don't use a conventional diff, but rather a void filled with a fluid that changes viscosity depending on temperature, but the characteristic fades over time, goes solid(?) and breaks the box. Freelander 1 springs to mind, but I could be wrong. So when you read about this or that four wheel drive requiring exacting diameter tyres you need to delve a bit deeper into the mechanics.
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						Thanks everyone, I appreciate your input.
I think I would feel more comfortable with him driving on 4x tyres the same, and if the front ones were a bit older, we might change them as well. But as luck would have it, we only put new Continentals on the front last year.
I’ll have a chat to the panel shop in the next couple of days and see what we can work out.
Cheers
 Fossicker
					
					
						Fossicker
					
					
                                        
					
					
						It doesn't matter, as long as they're the same diameter. You could have one end as muds and one as racing slicks. The centre diff doesn't care what tread pattern they have. For example, VW Haldex systems have a tolerance of 4% difference in rolling diameter from end to end. Obviously that is a totally different system, but there is always tolerance built in. Your tyres will never be the exact same diameter unless you buy four new ones at the same time and swap them every week to keep the wear identical, and nobody does that.
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