Bear with me - I don't know much about cars and I don't know what can make a car fail inspection (besides obvious things like missing wheels, giant holes, bodies in the trunk, etc.)
My BF got his car as a hand-me-down from his parents after they got a new one. It's a real POS, but it runs. Thing is the same exact tires have been on it since before I met him - meaning those tires are probably going on their 10th birthday, and they are totally bald. I think they're those all-season tires, but they sure don't seem like it in the winter.
Last year he drove me home in a snowstorm and we were going about 20 mph. The tiniest pressure on the brakes made us spin out several times. From what I've been told, having tires with even a tiny bit of baldness can make you fail inspection or at least get a verbal warning to change them around here, yet this car passes inspection just fine every year.
I'm just wondering if this is normal? BF's broke, so that car won't be seeing new tires anytime soon, especially after a couple of costly repairs over the last few months.
My BF got his car as a hand-me-down from his parents after they got a new one. It's a real POS, but it runs. Thing is the same exact tires have been on it since before I met him - meaning those tires are probably going on their 10th birthday, and they are totally bald. I think they're those all-season tires, but they sure don't seem like it in the winter.
Last year he drove me home in a snowstorm and we were going about 20 mph. The tiniest pressure on the brakes made us spin out several times. From what I've been told, having tires with even a tiny bit of baldness can make you fail inspection or at least get a verbal warning to change them around here, yet this car passes inspection just fine every year.
I'm just wondering if this is normal? BF's broke, so that car won't be seeing new tires anytime soon, especially after a couple of costly repairs over the last few months.
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