My daily driver is a high mileage 1999 F-250 Super Duty. 400,000 miles.
Over the years I have had a pervasive tire wear problem which I can't diagnose.
It is currently wearing Cooper Discoverer ATR's. They are a 10 ply all terrain road tire designed as an original replacement tire.
The tires are LT235/85R16's with an "E" load range.
No matter what I do, I usually get about 20K miles out of the front tires. The rears wear evenly. The fronts do not.
But the wear is weird. Most wear patterns are viewed across the face of the tire. Center ridge wear, outer wear, cupping, second rib wear, one side wear, or feathering ALL imply something happening across the face of the tire.
In this case the wear is rotational. The tires wear "evenly" across the face (that is to say they have similar issues across the entire face), but each individual lug is wearing front to rear. That is to say, the leading edge (first to contact the road) of each individual lug is higher than the trailing edge, then the next lug is worn in a similar manner. There can be an 1/8" or more variation from the trailing edge of one lug to the leading edge of the next. The whole tire looks like the individual lugs are ground cockeyed, like an alligator skin.
Over the years, I've done the alignment, checked the front end components, bearings, brakes, shocks, everything (although not always at the same time). No matter what I do, the tire wear is similar.
I finally gave up on it, and resigned to replacing a pair of tires every 20K (and listening to the noise and vibration).
I don't usually deal with the dealership, but had a reason to be there recently.
The service department suggested it was not uncommon on these trucks, and that it was related to the alignment. He said that over time the alignment adjustment is limited, and there isn't enough adjustment any more. He said "fortunately the after market has a solution- after market adjustment cams", and said they could install them for something like $800- 1000.
While the price was steep enough, I was trying to figure out the diagnosis. Why would Ford have insufficient alignment adjustment for normal highway driving conditions? Why would they admit it? Why would they turn to the after market, instead of issuing a fix?
Any thoughts? I don't get Ford's perspective. Should I just resign to the fact that it is a high mileage truck and keep on replacing tires? What would cause wear patterns like this?