Mon–Fri 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Why it matters

Tires are your only contact with the road.

Every braking, accelerating, and steering input has to travel through the four palm-sized patches of rubber that touch the pavement. Worn or unevenly-worn tires reduce grip in exactly the situations where you need it most — wet roads, sudden stops, evasive maneuvers.

Tires don't wear evenly on their own. On a front-wheel-drive vehicle, the front tires do almost all the steering, accelerating, and most of the braking — they wear roughly twice as fast as the rears. Rotating tires on a regular schedule moves the worn ones to a less-stressed position so the whole set wears down together.

Done right, rotation can add 10,000–15,000 miles to a set of tires. Skip it and you'll be replacing a pair years before the back pair is anywhere close to worn out — and driving on a vehicle that handles unevenly in the meantime.

What's involved

Our tire service, end to end.

From a quick rotation to a full set of new rubber, here's how we handle it.

Rotation

We follow the correct rotation pattern for your drivetrain (front-cross, rear-cross, or X) and torque every lug nut to factory spec.

Mounting & balancing

New tires are machine-mounted, road-force balanced, and inspected for any defects. Properly balanced tires eliminate steering-wheel vibration at highway speed.

Valve stems & TPMS

Fresh rubber valve stems with every new tire. We service or reset your tire-pressure monitoring system so the dash light stays off.

Tread & pressure check

We measure tread depth at multiple points, set every tire to the door-jamb spec, and flag uneven wear that may point to alignment or suspension issues.

Signs it's time

When to come in.

Tire problems rarely fix themselves. Catch them early and you replace pairs instead of full sets.

It's been 5,000–7,500 miles since the last rotation

An easy rule: rotate at every other oil change. Most modern vehicles need it between 5,000 and 7,500 miles.

You feel a vibration through the steering wheel

A consistent vibration around 50–70 mph usually means a wheel is out of balance. A vibration that comes and goes can mean a bent rim or worn suspension part.

Tread looks low or the wear bars are showing

The penny test: insert a penny upside down into the tread. If you can see all of Lincoln's head, you're at 2/32" — legally bald and time to replace. We recommend replacement at 4/32" for wet-weather safety.

The vehicle pulls to one side

Could be tire pressure, an internal tire defect, or — most often — alignment. We check all three before recommending anything.

Low-pressure (TPMS) light is on

Cold mornings can drop pressure enough to trigger the light. If it stays on after a top-off, you may have a slow leak — bring it in.

Tires checked or replaced — same day.

We stock the most common sizes and can usually have specialty tires here within a day. Call for a quote on any brand.

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