Re: Wheel alignment and tread wear

Dear experts,

> > I have recently had a flat in one of my tires. It was > repaired, but, not perfectly, because it keeps losing air. > > Sears said that they would repair this puncture three times > under road hazard warranty. If it kept losing air, they would > replace the tire. > > I asked if they would replace both tires. Since you are > always supposed to replace sets of tires. They said no. > Excuse: the car is not an all wheel drive. >

Does your road hazard warranty address replacement of both tires in the event of a failure of one? I bet it does not. Have you even read your road hazard warranty fine print? If not, you are like the blind arguing with the blind about the color of the sunrise.

Here in the Pacific NW we have a chain of tire places called Les Schwab and they do free, and that is 0 dollars, flat repair, and that is any tire, it doesen't even have to be a tire that they originally sold. I have often gotten tires flat repaired there and their tire prices are competitive with everyone elses. Their only restriction is that if they dismount a tire for flat repair and find any cords showing, they will not remount the tire. Thus forcing you to buy a set of replacement tires from them. That has happened to me once, but as I knew of that policy before taking the car in, I did not mind.

I believe if you were to call around to the local tires places in your area you might find that it is cheaper to not purchase the road hazard warranty and just buy from a different tire place that has better flat repair prices.

I would also say if your that concerned, you should just go to a wrecking yard and buy a spare rim, have the opposite side wheel removed and put in your trunk, and put the new tires on the rims. I would bet that this would make a much better spare tire than the donut that is probably in there now.

It sounds like quite the hypocricy on Sears part. They > expect you to worship your tires, and rotate them often > so that they wear evenly, otherwise you are out of warranty. > But when it comes to fixing something under warranty > it doesn't matter what the difference is. >

Extended warranties are written for one reason - to make the company money selling them. They are designed with a million loopholes to get out of paying any claims on them. Most people that buy them don't use them, and they are a waste of money for those folks. Only a few people strike it rich where the extended warranty pays out more than they ever put in.

If you get a free tire out of this then you are getting more than most people get who buy a road hazard warranty. If the road hazard warranty cost you more than the price of a new tire then consider it a lesson learned and don't buy another one again. If the road hazard warranty cost less then you are gaining, then why are you complaining in the first place? If you didn't have the road hazard warranty at all, then you would be stuck paying for

2 tires which is more money.

Ted

Reply to
Ted Mittelstaedt
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