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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

How Tire Wear Patterns Help Diagnose Vehicle Issues

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Every tire that comes into your shop tells a story. Interpreting that story requires experience, skill, and knowing what to look for. Tire wear patterns act like a prologue, revealing alignment angles, suspension health, and ride control conditions, often before you perform any service.

A perfectly worn tire shows an even contact patch from shoulder to shoulder. In reality, suspension movement, body roll, and component wear constantly change camber, caster, and toe angles. The suspension’s geometry, combined with the condition of shocks, struts, and springs, dictates how the tire meets the road. If ride control can’t manage this movement, the tires wear unevenly.

Tire Wear Patterns and Suspension Geometry

Inner edge wear is one of the most frequent patterns. It usually links to negative camber combined with toe-out. Weak springs or worn suspension bushings can lower ride height enough to throw geometry off and create sharp inner-edge wear. On vehicles with independent rear suspension, worn bushings can exaggerate negative camber and toe-out, quickly destroying inside shoulders.

Wear on both edges almost always signals underinflation. Aggressive driving or severely worn ride control components can make the problem worse. Remind customers to keep tires inflated to recommended levels, even if the TPMS light doesn’t turn on.

Feathered, Scalloped, and Cupped Wear

Feathered tread blocks indicate the toe angle is off. Running fingertips across the tread is the simplest way to confirm it. Feathering on the inside points to excessive toe-in, while feathering on the outside signals toe-out. Because toe is influenced by camber and caster, it is always the last angle to set during an alignment and immediately changes if suspension height shifts.

Scalloped or cupped patterns show that the ride control system isn’t doing its job. Worn shocks and struts allow the tire to bounce, which cuts dips into the tread. Lack of rotation makes the issue worse, especially on the rear axle.

Turning Tire Wear Patterns Into Service

For technicians, reading tire wear patterns is both a diagnostic skill and a sales opportunity. Explaining to customers what their tires are showing builds trust and helps justify alignment work, ride control replacement, and proper inflation practices. When you learn to read the story of a tire, you improve vehicle performance and shop profitability.

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The post How Tire Wear Patterns Help Diagnose Vehicle Issues appeared first on Tire Review Magazine.

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