Tire Service, Balance & TPMS
Mount, balance, TPMS relearn, DOT codes, torque spec, leak diagnosis. The full tire-bay walkthrough an apprentice does a dozen times a day.
Table of contents
Tire Service, Balance & TPMS
Tires are the first job most apprentices see end-to-end. They look simple. They are not. A lug nut torqued with an air gun at 180 ft-lbs on a 100 ft-lbs spec will stretch a wheel stud until it snaps three weeks later on the highway. A valve stem over-torqued with channel locks will crack at the base and leak six months after you sent the car out. A TPMS relight that never got reset is a callback and a one-star review.
This is the full mount-and-balance walkthrough.
Tire Sizing Code
A sidewall reads something like 225/60R17 98V. Break it down:
| Element | Value | Meaning |
|---------|-------|-------------------------------------------------|
| 225 | 225 | Section width in millimeters |
| 60 | 60 | Aspect ratio: sidewall height is 60% of 225 mm |
| R | R | Radial construction |
| 17 | 17 | Rim diameter in inches |
| 98 | 98 | Load index, 1,653 lb per tire |
| V | V | Speed rating, 149 mph sustained |
Do not drop below original load index on anything that tows, hauls, or carries passengers regularly. Do not drop below original speed rating on a sport sedan that was designed for a V or W tire. You match or exceed. Never undercut.
Load Index Table
| Index | lb per tire |
|-------|-------------|
| 85 | 1,135 |
| 89 | 1,279 |
| 91 | 1,356 |
| 94 | 1,477 |
| 98 | 1,653 |
| 102 | 1,874 |
| 105 | 2,039 |
| 109 | 2,271 |
| 113 | 2,535 |
Speed Rating Table
| Symbol | Max sustained |
|--------|---------------|
| S | 112 mph |
| T | 118 mph |
| H | 130 mph |
| V | 149 mph |
| W | 168 mph |
| Y | 186 mph |
| (Y) | above 186 mph |
DOT Date Code
The DOT code ends in a 4-digit date: week-week-year-year. "2423" means the 24th week of 2023. Industry rules of thumb:
- 6 years: conservative replacement age regardless of tread
- 10 years: hard stop, even on a low-mile spare
- Any tire with sidewall cracking (weather checking) goes, date aside
Spares and trailer tires are the biggest offenders here. A 12-year-old spare will blow within a mile of being mounted at highway speed.
Tread Depth
| Tread depth | Condition |
|-------------|----------------------------------------|
| 10/32"+ | New (most all-seasons start 10-11/32") |
| 6/32" | Halfway gone, fine |
| 4/32" | Marginal in the wet |
| 3/32" | Recommend replacement |
| 2/32" | Legal minimum, already failing |
Use a depth gauge, not a penny. Match tire wear across an axle within 2/32". On all-wheel-drive cars, within 2/32" across all four is often a manufacturer requirement to protect the transfer case and center differential.
Dismount Procedure
- Let the air out via the valve core. Do not just pull the core with your thumb on a hot tire.
- Break the bead with the bead breaker, not by pounding with a tire iron. Pinch wounds on the inner liner lead to slow leaks.
- Position the demount head to slip over the bead. Use bead lube generously on both beads.
- Rotate the tire off. Flip and repeat for the bottom bead.
Do not skip bead lube. A dry dismount scuffs the bead and creates leak paths on the next mount.
Mount Procedure
- Inspect the rim. Look for cracks, bent flange, deep curb rash at the bead seat, and corrosion. A bent flange gets replaced. A cracked rim is scrap. Do not remount on damaged rims.
- Replace the valve stem every time you dismount. TR-413 snap-in for steel, metal clamp-in for most alloy wheels, sensor-stem for TPMS.
- Lube both beads.
- Mount the tire paying attention to direction arrows and outside sidewall callout.
- Inflate in a bead-seating cage or with the tire on the machine. Pop the beads with controlled inflation.
Safety rule: OSHA and every tire-industry bulletin says to never exceed 40 psi to seat a bead. If it does not seat by 40 psi, something is wrong, most likely bead lube, a bent rim, or a stretched bead. Never stand in the plane of the tire while inflating. Sidewall failures at seating are rare but take faces off.
Lug Nut Torque
Air-gun-tight is a myth. Torque with a calibrated torque wrench, or a torque stick rated to the spec plus final check with a click-type wrench.
| Vehicle class | Typical spec |
|----------------------------------------|-----------------|
| Small passenger car | 80-90 ft-lbs |
| Midsize passenger car / crossover | 90-100 ft-lbs |
| Full-size pickup, half-ton | 120-140 ft-lbs |
| Three-quarter / one-ton pickup | 140-175 ft-lbs |
| Many Teslas | 129 ft-lbs |
| Many BMW / Mercedes (wheel bolts) | 88-103 ft-lbs |
Always look up the spec. Tighten in a star pattern. Final pass at spec with a torque wrench. Apply the retorque sticker: "Return in 50-100 miles for a free retorque." This protects you and the customer when an alloy wheel relaxes on its seat.
Wheel Balance
Imbalance types:
- Static imbalance: heavy spot concentrated at one point, causes bounce
- Dynamic imbalance: heavy spots offset front and rear of the tire centerline, causes shimmy
- Road-force imbalance: tire high-spot matched against rim low-spot to minimize radial run-out
Most shop balancers are dynamic. Road-force balancers (Hunter GSP9700 and similar) are standard at dealerships and heavy on comebacks. Always clean the mounting face and the center bore before a balance. Wheel weight types:
- Clip-on weights on steel wheels, clip matched to the rim flange shape
- Adhesive tape weights for alloys, hidden behind the spokes where possible
- Never stack dissimilar weight types unless the machine asks for it
Common cause of a post-balance comeback:
- Debris or old weight residue inside the rim
- Bent or out-of-round rim
- Cupped or out-of-round tire (feathered or unevenly worn)
- Dirty mounting face
- Loose spare in the trunk (yes, really)
TPMS
Two types:
- Direct: a pressure sensor with a battery inside each wheel, broadcasting to the BCM. Battery life 5 to 10 years.
- Indirect: the BCM infers low pressure from wheel-speed differences via the ABS sensors. No in-wheel hardware.
Relearn procedures vary by OEM:
| Brand | Typical relearn |
|--------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------|
| GM | OBD-II auto-relearn with pressure decrease then re-inflation |
| Ford | Magnet or TPMS tool at each wheel, in sequence |
| Toyota / Lexus | "Set" button, then drive at speed, or TPMS tool |
| Honda | Infotainment menu or drive relearn |
| BMW | iDrive menu reset, then drive-cycle, may require scan tool |
| Dodge / Chrysler | TPMS tool at each wheel |
| Most European, post-2014 | Scan tool or OBD-II TPMS menu |
If a sensor is dead, replace the full stem assembly. Clone the ID from the old sensor with a TPMS tool when possible, or register the new sensor ID to the vehicle. Never disable the warning light and call it done. Never reuse a sensor nut, grommet, or seal kit: every sensor comes with fresh rubber and you use it.
Valve-stem torque on metal TPMS stems: 4 to 8 in-lbs. Over-torque cracks the stem at the base and you get a slow leak three months later. Use an in-lb torque tool.
Leak Diagnosis
The hunt order:
- Inflate to spec, spray soapy water at the valve core, bead, stem base, and all the way around the sidewall and tread.
- Watch for bubbles. Big foam is a large leak, fine fizz is a slow leak.
- Check the valve core with a valve-core torque tool. Cores fail silently.
- Pull the tire and look at the inner liner under light. Road-hazard punctures often show their exit point on the inside, not the outside.
- Inspect the rim bead seat for corrosion pitting, a classic aluminum-wheel slow-leak cause. Wire-brush and reseat with a bead sealer.
Repair vs Replace
Industry (RMA / USTMA) guidance:
- Repairable: through-the-tread punctures, in the middle 75% of the tread, 1/4 inch diameter or less.
- Not repairable: sidewall or shoulder punctures, cuts exceeding 1/4 inch, repairs that overlap an old repair, any tire run flat enough to damage the inner liner.
- Plug-only from the outside is not a permanent repair. Combination plug-patch (mushroom patch) from the inside after buffing the liner is the correct method.
Always dismount, inspect the inner liner for run-flat damage, and repair from inside.
Post-Service Ritual
- Torque all four wheels to spec with a click-type wrench.
- Reset TPMS per the OEM procedure and verify the light goes out.
- Verify all four at the door-placard PSI, not the max sidewall PSI.
- Check the spare at its own spec pressure.
- Put the retorque sticker on the steering wheel or driver window.
- Clean the fender, sill, and seat. A greasy seat cushion is a customer complaint the advisor cannot fix.
That is the tire bay. Quality at the last four items is what separates an apprentice you keep from one you replace.