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Identifying tire age

KSCRZR

New member
I was making a list of maintenance items to work through on my wife's Spyder and was trying to figure out the age of the tires on it. All of the tires have two sets of 4 numbers after the DOT code, not sure which is the correct one. Attached a picture of one of the fronts. Thanks.
 

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Either of the 2 sets of numbers makes the tires pretty old. I have not noticed two sets of numbers like that before..... Jim
 
its usually week then year. Are there any other 4 digit codes on the tire that make more sence. althout if its an 09,10 bike might make sence. but if its a 2020 then id say theres a diffrent code then those 2
 
Whatever way you look at it, those Kenda tires are OLD & quite likely unsafe at any speed! :yikes:

For tires manufactured after the year 2000, the tire date code is generally the 4 numerics immediately after the tire size & the 3 Alpha brand/compound characteristic letters...... :rolleyes:

There's lotsa other sources if you want to look, but check this link out for a detailed explanation -

https://danthetireman.com/blog/article/how-to-read-tire-date-codes-what-do-tire-dot-numbers-mean
 
I was making a list of maintenance items to work through on my wife's Spyder and was trying to figure out the age of the tires on it. All of the tires have two sets of 4 numbers after the DOT code, not sure which is the correct one. Attached a picture of one of the fronts. Thanks.




~~~1608 equates to the 16th week of 2008. That tire is 13+years old. Like Peter said, unsafe @ any speed

A long time ago i bought a 1956 Lincoln Premiere from a family friend. It was his Father’s car and Louie just so happened to have purchased a 56’ Thunderbird the same year. Same Ford dealer too & Louie still had the T bird. Anyways, i bought it in 1977. The tires were old as the Lincoln hadn’t been driven in well over a decade. It was a beautiful automobile and spent its hibernating years in one of their storage buildings. Their family business was a Fishery. So i drove on those old tires after we got it in running condition not very long, a few weeks but what amazed me regarding the tires on this car was they were so dry rotted that you could literally see the rubber coming off them much like the rubber used for pencil erasers. Tire technology has come a long way since then and i doubt the OP will see that kind of wear on his wife’s Spyder but none the less, Peter is right, install new tires ASAP


Best,


Jake
Reddick Fla.
Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in a while
 
~~~1608 equates to the 16th week of 2008. That tire is 13+years old. Like Peter said, unsafe @ any speed

A long time ago i bought a 1956 Lincoln Premiere from a family friend. It was his Father’s car and Louie just so happened to have purchased a 56’ Thunderbird the same year. Same Ford dealer too & Louie still had the T bird. Anyways, i bought it in 1977. The tires were old as the Lincoln hadn’t been driven in well over a decade. It was a beautiful automobile and spent its hibernating years in one of their storage buildings. Their family business was a Fishery. So i drove on those old tires after we got it in running condition not very long, a few weeks but what amazed me regarding the tires on this car was they were so dry rotted that you could literally see the rubber coming off them much like the rubber used for pencil erasers. Tire technology has come a long way since then and i doubt the OP will see that kind of wear on his wife’s Spyder but none the less, Peter is right, install new tires ASAP


Best,


Jake
Reddick Fla.
Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in a while

" 16th week of 2008 " .... if so then they are the Original tires that Spyder came with :gaah::lecturef_smilie:............. Mike :thumbup:
 
" 16th week of 2008 " .... if so then they are the Original tires that Spyder came with :gaah::lecturef_smilie:............. Mike :thumbup:




~~~oh crap!, I’m aging faster than i thought…someone mentioned a 2nd set of numbers after the department of transportation acronym. That 2nd set of numbers is the manufacturing date. It looks like 0910 which would be the ninth week of 2010. I have been putting off a scheduled eye examination. Speaking of pencil erasers, that’s why they put erasers on pencils :bowdown: for those who make mistakes (((ME)))


Best,


Jake
Reddick Fla.
It’s never too late to have a happy childhood
 
I'm pretty sure that tire was manufactured in the 16th week of 2008. The date is the last 4 numbers connected after the 'DOT' marking. The 0910 is disconnected from the 'DOT' mark.
 
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