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DrRob



Member Since: 16 Apr 2015
Location: Petersfield, Hampshire
Posts: 4303

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Vogue SE TDV8 Buckingham Blue

I like an experiment Thumbs Up
Bloody scientist (me) Rolling Eyes Rolling with laughter Gone to a good home: 2011 4.4 TDV8 Vogue SE Buckingham Blue with Ivory and clear glass = "Rory"
2025MY Defender D350 90 in Silicon Silver on coils
1974 Series 3 Lightweight = "Millie"
Many, many other Landies over the years
My preferred specialist: www.glenrands.co.uk
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Post #564303 12th Aug 2020 12:18pm
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alanm_3



Member Since: 19 Feb 2011
Location: my House, unless I’m not at home, in which case I’m somewhere else.
Posts: 6729

Scotland 2017 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Loire Blue

Bloody engineer me, I need to know the reason why!!! Whistle Got - 2017 SDV8 Autobiography in Loire Blue
Had- 2008 TDV8 Vogue SE in Java black
Had - 2007 S/C in Stornoway Grey

Post #564305 12th Aug 2020 12:27pm
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PaulTyrer



Member Since: 22 Jul 2013
Location: Devizes, Wiltshire
Posts: 1254

United Kingdom 2006 Range Rover Supercharged 4.2 SC V8 Cairns Blue

For interest I used this tyre calculator, https://tiresize.com/tyre-size-calculator/ and it seems that the profiles give the following revolutions per mile

255/55x20 - 650 revolutions per mile
255/50x20 - 672 revolutions per mile.

So if you had the 50's on the back they would be trying to overtake the front!! (or something like that!)

I would have thought that it might be giving the transmission all sorts of issues!!

In one revolution the 55 section tyre travels 97.5"
In one revolution the 50 section tyre travels 94.3", so the 55 section travels 3.2" further than the 50 section, that must cause some wind up on the axles.
If you put 22" rims on 55's on one side they travel 103.8" so you could do donuts!!!!

Or go around roundabouts really really quickly!!

Post #564344 12th Aug 2020 4:02pm
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Range Rover L322



Member Since: 03 Sep 2019
Location: South West
Posts: 329

United Kingdom 

alanm_3 wrote:
Bloody engineer me, I need to know the reason why!!! Whistle


Most RR sensors self calibrate, and then once they are set and happy they don't like big surprises outside of certain tolerances for wear/driving conditions etc. You have given them a shock by changing different sized wheels around so its brain is like a fritzing robot. The Land Rover mantra - don't fix something that's not broken. Hard to follow that advice when we all love to tinker and improve.

I suspect your car was settled with and used to the differing sizes. Hopefully the transmission and/or diffs are not knackered. If you really want to experiment (and, whilst it's interesting I completely recommend you do NOT do it) then swap them around again and see what happens.

Your actual solution is to put same tyres on all round and reset the ECU. Be aware your speedo may need recalibrating too.


Last edited by Range Rover L322 on 12th Aug 2020 9:06pm. Edited 1 time in total

Post #564376 12th Aug 2020 8:11pm
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GraemeS



Member Since: 06 Mar 2015
Location: Wagga area
Posts: 2486

Australia 2012 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Bournville

There will be different tolerances for front wheel travel compared with the rear which I expect are biased to allow the front wheels to travel further than the rear which occurs when turning corners. Thus smaller front tyres travelling further are less likely to trigger a fault than larger front tyres travelling less than the rears.

The fault existing without travelling will be due to the need to demonstrate by a drive cycle that the previous fault condition no longer exists.

I'm astounded that anyone would mix tyres an inch difference in diameter on a 4WD, totally unlike different wear on notionally the same diameter tyre which is never an issue.

NB. Sensors do not self re-calibrate to accommodate unexpected results. ECUs are programmed to tolerate a range of values and when the value is out of range then a fault condition is logged.

Post #564386 12th Aug 2020 8:54pm
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alanm_3



Member Since: 19 Feb 2011
Location: my House, unless I’m not at home, in which case I’m somewhere else.
Posts: 6729

Scotland 2017 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Loire Blue

Ok, so I reverse engineered my actions of yesterday (purely for experimental purposes obviously) by swapping the n/s front and n/s rear wheels. The result? No errors at all Shocked

Clearly the car doesn’t like what I did to it, so I’ll be investing in 2 new 255/55 tyres as soon as. Not that I’m doing much mileage these days - 50 miles last month But I’d hate to upset and confuse the old girl Thumbs Up Got - 2017 SDV8 Autobiography in Loire Blue
Had- 2008 TDV8 Vogue SE in Java black
Had - 2007 S/C in Stornoway Grey

Post #564399 12th Aug 2020 10:06pm
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Bradders



Member Since: 03 Dec 2018
Location: Gods own country
Posts: 417

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Westminster TDV8 Zermatt Silver

Good to hear you're sorted. Maybe the old girl was just trying to tell you not to mix tyre sizes, as best she could, before it did more expensive damage Thumbs Up Current: FF Westminster money pit

Gone:
RRS 4.2 SC
RRS 3.6 TDV8
FL2 TD4

Post #564437 13th Aug 2020 8:22am
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alanm_3



Member Since: 19 Feb 2011
Location: my House, unless I’m not at home, in which case I’m somewhere else.
Posts: 6729

Scotland 2017 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Loire Blue

That's so unlike JLR to be so charitable Laughing Got - 2017 SDV8 Autobiography in Loire Blue
Had- 2008 TDV8 Vogue SE in Java black
Had - 2007 S/C in Stornoway Grey

Post #564443 13th Aug 2020 8:51am
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Anvil



Member Since: 18 Jan 2019
Location: Dorset
Posts: 140

United Kingdom 

When I last had my tyres changed, the quite knowledgeable chap at Pro-tyre said that the sensors tend not to like a 2mm difference in tread-depth on a change for just this reason. Its possible that the system copes with gradual wear, and accounts for it. If you then swap your tyres, you've increased the differential between front and rear by a factor of 2x in one hit? Maybe that's why it throws a wobbly? FFRR 4.2SC/KTM 990SMT Current and cherished.
Honda Accord 2.4 Vtec touring. (Yeah, I know, think: Kids)
Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution Nut-wagon. and a Buell XB12R
TVR Griffith 5.0 (backed up with Vauxhall Carlton road barge for the weekly shop.)
Honda Integra Type R DC2 Possibly the best drivers car. Ever.
Mitshibishi FTO GPX MIVEC.
Honda CRX Vtec Mk2 -NO, Not the del sol!!!
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Post #564814 17th Aug 2020 12:32pm
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GraemeS



Member Since: 06 Mar 2015
Location: Wagga area
Posts: 2486

Australia 2012 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Bournville

31" mixed with 30" is a very good reason for abs to get upset whereas 2mm is just a tyre dealer trying to sell more tyres.

Post #564854 17th Aug 2020 8:47pm
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Anvil



Member Since: 18 Jan 2019
Location: Dorset
Posts: 140

United Kingdom 

He wasn't trying to sell me more tyres, I didn't need them. He just put that into the conversation from his experience. FFRR 4.2SC/KTM 990SMT Current and cherished.
Honda Accord 2.4 Vtec touring. (Yeah, I know, think: Kids)
Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution Nut-wagon. and a Buell XB12R
TVR Griffith 5.0 (backed up with Vauxhall Carlton road barge for the weekly shop.)
Honda Integra Type R DC2 Possibly the best drivers car. Ever.
Mitshibishi FTO GPX MIVEC.
Honda CRX Vtec Mk2 -NO, Not the del sol!!!
Volkswagen Scirocco GT
Mini 1275GT
MG Midget (Heavily modified)
I'm going to stop now.....

Post #564884 18th Aug 2020 9:53am
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