Free: Contests & Raffles.
Siping is a waste of $$ and time in the first place.
Yep...pink for sure. Get a better traction tire suited for your needs. Cutting the tread for traction is basically shortening the actual tire life by modifying the original tread. Tire shops have been selling it for years. Nothing but an upsell. Why dont manufactures sipe their own? Because it is a waste of money. However, if you believe in it then do your thing.Bsck on topic I believe you cant sipe a second time for the same reason you dont cut rotors past a certain thickness. You need X amount 9f base material to work with. Hit the nail on the head.
Yep...pink for sure. Get a better traction tire suited for your needs. Cutting the tread for traction is basically shortening the actual tire life by modifying the original tread. Tire shops have been selling it for years. Nothing but an upsell. Why dont manufactures sipe their own? Because it is a waste of money. However, if you believe in it then do your thing.Bsck on topic I believe you cant sipe a second time for the same reason you dont cut rotors past a certain thickness. You need X amount 9f base material to work with.
Siping works very well, manufacturers have been doing it for years and know the value. Look at a set of new tires, you see all the little squiggles through the blocks of tread? That is siping. Look at studless snow tires, there is usually extensive siping. They significantly improve traction in most instances, I certainly disagree that it is a waste of money. Most tires have siping to some extent when new but they wear down turning the tire into a solid block tread. My Nitto Terra Grapplers were skates in the snow once they wore down a bit, after siping they gripped much better an so far I have not had any issues with increased wear. I would not do it to a tire I was going to be climbing with in heavy or sharp rock, that is where full block treads are useful and where siping is not necessary for grip anyway. Back to the topic though, siping a second time can overlay old sipes with new ones and create areas that are too thin for safety and drastically increase the chances of the tread pealing off. They cannot ensure that all the old siping is gone and for liability reasons will not do it a second time.