NISSAN MURANO . ORG
nissanmurano.org NISSAN MURANO . ORG Archive > General > Tires & Wheels
 
To replace the tires or to not replace the tires - that is the question. - Click HERE for Original Thread
ownersite
Our 2003 Murano is coming off lease in a couple of months. The tires are likely at or below the acceptable level of wear for lease turn-in, so I need to decide whether or not to actually replace them.

Does anyone have experience with Murano lease turn-in costs (i.e. penalties) with regards to tires?

I know that replacing them right now will cost at least $500.00, which seems to be a waste of money for only two months of personal use.

If the penalty is going to be $500 or less, I will likely keep the old tires on it.

Thanks in advance.
senza
Let the dealer you if the tires need to be replaced when you turn it in....no need spending money if you don't have to... if you plan on replacing MO with a Nissan product , they can be very forgiving on your lease turn in if you buy/lease another vehicle from them...
Kris
What about safety? Yours and those sharing road with you?
njjoe
I assume retreads are out of the question? :12:

If it were me, I would wait on the tires.

If you are getting another Nissan product the dealer may overlook the tires. I would like to believe any penalty would be less than your cost for 4 tires, since the dealer can get the Goodyears for less than you.

Just my two cents....

-njjoe
ownersite
quote:
Originally posted by Kris
What about safety? Yours and those sharing road with you?
Not an issue. The tires are exactly at the current "acceptable" level, so they are safe. We will keep it parked and drive the company car until the lease expires.

Not getting another Nissan vehicle...getting a company car.
Kris
quote:
Originally posted by ownersite
Not an issue. The tires are exactly at the current "acceptable" level, so they are safe. We will keep it parked and drive the company car until the lease expires.

Not getting another Nissan vehicle...getting a company car.




So you answered your question - do not replace.
ownersite
quote:
Originally posted by Kris



So you answered your question - do not replace.

Still wouldn't mind an answer to the financial aspect of the original question from those that may have experience. If the wear level is below the acceptable level at turn-in time (perhaps I used a different measurement technique or the inspector will find an area of the tire on which to measure that has slightly less tread) and I spend $500+ on new tires, am I actually saving money over the tire-wear penalty? (safety issue aside, please, I am not going to intentionally risk the safety of my family)
ekaxel
If they inspect your lease return like they do everything else, you have nothing to worry about!!
ownersite
quote:
Originally posted by ekaxel
If they inspect your lease return like they do everything else, you have nothing to worry about!!
I wish that were the case. This is the 3rd Nissan vehicle that we've leased and the company the does the inspections seems to be VERY detailed and picky. The other two vehicles were so low mileage that tire wear was not an issue, but the inspector found every tiny nick, ding and scratch --- to the tune of about $225 in "damages" on our 2002 Altima. We ended up buying that lease out at the end and trading it in on our 2005 Volvo S60R. Financially speaking, we benefitted on that one because of the low residual value and overall great condition and low mileage.

Powered by: Search Engine Indexer and vBulletin v2.2.8
Copyright © 2000 - 2002, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited
Copyright 2000 Acuramdx.org. All Rights Reserved.