What in the world is going on here?
Car is driven in South Florida, no pot holes in my driving habits that I remember (I'm very boring, I don't go anywhere but work and the boat)...
Brought the car in because I thought a wheel bearing was going bad. Dealership calls back and says "Your rear two tires need to be replaced, and your alignment needs to be done".
Then when I asked how only the rear alignment is out, he starts talking about the fronts needing to be replaced too.
At that point I said "thank you for this unfortunate information, I'll be picking the car up this afternoon...
I will admit I am totally shocked. If this is the normal for an accord sport I'll be looking to get out of this lease ASAP. I've owned other "sports" editions of cars, before this one it was a Lexus IS 350 F Sport. That one also liked to eat tires, but not at 14,000 miles, and it was the fronts, not the rears.
So Drive Accord friends, is this normal for this car? I've already decided the next lease I get will be bottom of the barrel with the cheapest tires I can find on it. I expected more from Honda engineering.
Is there any kind of tire warranty that you're aware of on a stock car leased from a dealership? I did also buy the tire and wheel insurance but not sure that would cover this.
Car is driven in South Florida, no pot holes in my driving habits that I remember (I'm very boring, I don't go anywhere but work and the boat)...
Brought the car in because I thought a wheel bearing was going bad. Dealership calls back and says "Your rear two tires need to be replaced, and your alignment needs to be done".
Then when I asked how only the rear alignment is out, he starts talking about the fronts needing to be replaced too.
At that point I said "thank you for this unfortunate information, I'll be picking the car up this afternoon...
I will admit I am totally shocked. If this is the normal for an accord sport I'll be looking to get out of this lease ASAP. I've owned other "sports" editions of cars, before this one it was a Lexus IS 350 F Sport. That one also liked to eat tires, but not at 14,000 miles, and it was the fronts, not the rears.
So Drive Accord friends, is this normal for this car? I've already decided the next lease I get will be bottom of the barrel with the cheapest tires I can find on it. I expected more from Honda engineering.
Is there any kind of tire warranty that you're aware of on a stock car leased from a dealership? I did also buy the tire and wheel insurance but not sure that would cover this.