solvent was one of my first thoughts.
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My standard scorpions get to a certain point then disappear. And they develop a look that makes them look like they have two different types of rubber on the tread.
Too much toe and low pressure will show differently then too much and high pressure aswell. I had a wheel alignment done once on mine that ate the corner of my tyre. I had no issues before that alignment. Did it just because I got tyres. Had a mate redo the alignment. Basically off the sheets he reversed what they did. Both times the car didn't pull to one side. However when the steering wheel came off centre with the bad alignment it steered really fast. With it corrected was much more linear
I think I've only got 36 in the front.
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...4ef658aa31.jpg
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Lots of tyres have different compounds for the tread compared with the carcase.
Discs are on great condition, only six months old
front pads were replaced at the time of the two near rear tyres a few weeks ago
no scrubbing or signs of it.
have written to Pirelli to ask how it would drop so suddenly. I hear what your saying about the alignment issue but 90% of the tyre wore perfectly then all of a sudden changed, but only for one tyre. Seems odd but happy to see what they say
Is it possible you’ve hit a pothole and bend something or knocked something out of alignment, that a bush has given way and is now allowing movement etc? These things could happen suddenly and cause a rapid tyre degradation. I’d suggest you get it on a hoist ASAP and give it a once over, and go from there. You have a problem, a recent and sudden one I guess [emoji2369]
Have you confirmed that the wheel turns freely back and forth to the extent the drive-line slack allows?
I appreciate that but sometimes not all is initially revealed.