(By P.G. Dilshan Maduwantha – Mechanical & Automotive Engineering)

Introduction

Tyres play a critical role in vehicle safety, comfort and fuel efficiency. Choosing the right tyre is not just about size — it affects braking distance, handling, tyre life and even fuel consumption. As a mechanical and automotive engineering professional, I have worked with DIMO, Isuzu and Sri Lanka Railways, and I have seen how tyre selection mistakes directly cause failures.
In this article, we will look at the most important things to consider when selecting a tyre and the common reasons why tyres fail.

1. Match the Correct Tyre Size

Always use the tyre size recommended by the manufacturer.
You will find it on:

  • Owner’s manual
  • Driver door sticker
  • Existing tyre sidewall

Example: 195/65R15

  • 195 → Width
  • 65 → Aspect ratio
  • R → Radial
  • 15 → Rim size

Using the wrong size affects stability, ABS braking, fuel economy and suspension alignment.

2. Load Index & Speed Rating

Each tyre has a load index (weight capacity) and speed rating.

  • Load Index Example: 91 = 615 kg per tyre
  • Speed Rating Example: H = 210 km/h

If you buy a tyre with low load index, it will overheat and fail quickly. Sri Lankan conditions (heat + load) demand higher load index tyres.


3. Tyre Tread Pattern Selection

There are 3 main categories:

🔹 Symmetrical pattern

Best for daily driving, long tyre life, better comfort.

🔹 Asymmetrical pattern

Good for wet & dry grip, high-speed performance.

🔹 Directional pattern

Best for rain and wet roads (aquaplaning resistance).

Choose the pattern according to your driving style.


4. Manufacturing Date (DOT Code)

A tyre has a DOT code like: 2223

  • 22 → Week
  • 23 → Year
    = Manufactured in 22nd week of 2023.

Do NOT buy tyres older than 2 years — rubber gets harder and loses grip.


5. Weather & Road Condition Suitability

Sri Lanka = hot climate + heavy rain + rough roads.
For this climate:

  • Heat-resistant compound
  • Strong sidewalls
  • Good wet traction
  • High load index
  • Stone-ejector tread designs

Chinese tyres cheap but weak in heat; Japanese & Thai brands last longer.


6. Tube vs Tubeless

Tubeless tyres are better because:

  • Less heat
  • Less sudden air loss
  • Fuel efficient
  • Can run even with small puncture

Only use tube-type if your rim is not tubeless-compatible.


7. Brand Reputation & Warranty

Always check:

  • Brand history
  • Warranty terms
  • Dealer authenticity
  • Customer feedback

Fake tyres are common — avoid untrusted shops.


8. Price vs Performance

The cheapest tyre is never the best.
Consider:

  • Tyre life
  • Road safety
  • Braking performance

A good tyre saves fuel and reduces accidents.


Why Tyres Fail – Common Causes

1️⃣ Under-inflation (most common)

2️⃣ Overloading

3️⃣ High speed on hot roads

4️⃣ Incorrect alignment

5️⃣ Old tyres

6️⃣ Potholes & road damage

7️⃣ Poor-quality brands / Counterfeit tyres


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