User Guide

Dual Tire Operation
When the vehicle is
new,
or whenever a wheel, wheel
bolt or wheel
nut
is replaced, check the wheel
nut
torque
after
100,
1,000
and
6,000
miles
(160,
1
600
and
10
000
km)
of driving. For proper torque, see “Wheel
Nut
Torque’’ in the Index.
The outer tire on a dual wheel setup generally wears
faster than the inner tire. Your tires will wear more
evenly and last longer if
you
rotate the tires periodically.
If you’re going to be doing a lot of driving on
high-crown roads, you can reduce tire wear by adding
5
psi
(35
kPa) to the tire pressure in the outer tires. Be
sure to return to the recommended pressures when no
longer driving under those conditions. See “Changing a
Flat Tire” in the Index for more information.
If
you operate your vehicle with a tire that
is
badly underinflated, the tire can overheat. An
overheated tire can lose air suddenly or catch
fire. You or others could be injured. Be sure all
tires (including the spare) are properly inflated.
Buying New Tires
To find out what kind and size
of
tires
you
need,
look
at
the Certificationmire label.
The tires installed on your vehicle when it was new had
a
Tire Performance Criteria Specification (TPC Spec)
number on each tire’s sidewall. When you get new tires,
get ones with that same TPC Spec number. That way
your vehicle will continue
to
have tires that are designed
to give proper endurance, handling, speed rating,
traction, ride and other things during normal service on
your vehicle. If your tires have an all-season tread
design, the TPC number will be followed by an
“MS”
(for mud and snow).
If you ever replace your tires with those not having a
TPC Spec number, make sure they are the same size,
load
range, speed rating and construction type (bias,
bias-belted or radial) as your original tires.
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