|
U.S. coins can be
substituted for a tire tread
depth gauge as tires wear to
the critical final few 32nds
of an inch of their
remaining tread depth.
|
Place a penny into
several tread
grooves across the
tire. If part of
Lincoln's head is
always covered by
the tread, you have
more than 2/32" of
tread depth
remaining. |
|

2/32" remaining
tread depth |
|
|
Place a quarter into
several tread
grooves across the
tire. If part of
Washington's head is
always covered by
the tread, you have
more than 4/32" of
tread depth
remaining. |
|

4/32" remaining
tread depth |
|
|
Place a penny into
several tread
grooves across the
tire. If the top of
the Lincoln Memorial
is always covered by
the tread, you have
more than 6/32" of
tread depth
remaining. |
|

6/32" remaining
tread depth |
Once you have determined the
approximate remaining tread
depth in the first location,
you can complete your
measurement of each tire by
placing the coin into
additional locations at
lease 15 inches apart around
the tire's central
circumferential groove, as
well as in its inner and
outer grooves. This will
help detect uneven wear
caused by mechanical or
service conditions.
The Law
According to most states'
laws, tires are legally worn
out when they have worn down
to 2/32" of remaining tread
depth. To help warn drivers
that their tires have
reached that point, tires
sold in North America are
required to have indicators
molded into their tread
design called "wear bars"
which run across their tread
pattern from their outside
shoulder to inside shoulder.
Wear bars are designed to
visually connect the
elements of the tire's tread
pattern and warn drivers
when their tires no longer
meet minimum tread depth
requirements.
Common Sense
However, as a tire wears
it's important to realize
that the tire's ability to
perform in rain and snow
will be reduced. With 2/32"
of remaining tread depth,
resistance to hydroplaning
in the rain at highway
speeds has been
significantly reduced, and
traction in snow has been
virtually eliminated.
If rain and wet roads are a
concern, you should consider
replacing your tires when
they reach approximately
4/32" of remaining tread
depth. Since water can't be
compressed, you need enough
tread depth to allow rain to
escape through the tire's
grooves. If the water can't
escape fast enough, your
vehicle's tires will be
forced to hydroplane (float)
on top of the water, losing
traction.
If snow-covered roads are a
concern, you should consider
replacing your tires when
they reach approximately
6/32" of remaining tread
depth to maintain good
mobility. You need more
tread depth in snow because
your tires need to compress
the snow in their grooves
and release it as they roll.
If there isn't sufficient
tread depth, the "bites" of
snow your tires can take on
each revolution will be
reduced to "nibbles," and
your vehicle's traction and
mobility will be sacrificed.
Because tread depth is such
an important element for
snow traction, winter tires
usually start with
noticeably deeper tread
depths than typical
All-Season or summer tires.
Some winter tires even have
a second series of "wear
bars" molded in their tread
pattern indicating
approximately 6/32"
remaining tread depth to
warn you when your tires no
longer meet the desired
tread depth. |