Truck Tire Wear Patterns

Alignment-Related Wear

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Alignment describes the geometric relationship between the wheel, the axle, and the direction of travel. When those angles are off specification, the tire contacts the road at an angle rather than rolling cleanly. The result is directional or one-sided wear that pressure correction alone cannot fix.

This page maps alignment conditions to the wear patterns they produce and links to the detailed investigation pages for each.

This site is for general information only. It does not replace professional tire service, DOT compliance advice, tire manufacturer instructions, vehicle manufacturer recommendations, or fleet policy.

Alignment condition to wear pattern

Alignment conditionResulting wear patternReference page
Toe misalignment (toe-in or toe-out)Feathering — saw-tooth texture across tread ribs/tire-wear/feathering-wear/
Camber (wheel tilted inward or outward)Single-shoulder wear — one edge lower than center and opposite shoulder/tire-wear/one-side-tire-wear/
Trailer axle not perpendicular to direction of travelDiagonal wear — angled bands across trailer tread/tire-wear/diagonal-tire-wear/
Drive axle misalignment or worn torque rodsHeel-toe wear and possible diagonal pattern on drive tires/tire-wear/heel-toe-wear/
Steer axle alignment (combined toe and camber)Rapid wear, one-sided, or feathering — steer tires are the most sensitive to alignment/tire-wear/steer-tire-irregular-wear/

When alignment is likely the cause

  • The same wear pattern appears on multiple consecutive tire sets in the same position.
  • The wear pattern continues after pressure has been verified as correct.
  • Both tires on an axle show similar irregular wear.
  • Wear appeared after a suspension repair, frame impact, or road hazard.
  • The vehicle pulls to one side or steering feels different from before the wear appeared.

What alignment cannot fix

Alignment corrects angular misalignment between wheels and the direction of travel. It does not fix worn shock absorbers, loose wheel bearings, bent axle shafts, or worn suspension bushings. These mechanical issues produce wear that alignment adjustment alone cannot resolve. When alignment correction does not stop the wear pattern within one tire set, the suspension and wheel-end components on the affected axle deserve inspection.

Related Maintenance Checklist

  • Photograph irregular wear before alignment service.
  • Get an alignment report — verify which angles were corrected.
  • Recheck tires after the first 5,000–10,000 miles post-alignment to confirm wear has stopped.
  • Investigate suspension components if alignment correction does not stop the pattern.

FAQ

How do I know if my truck's alignment is causing tire wear?

Alignment-related wear usually shows a consistent pattern: the same rib or shoulder wearing faster across multiple tire replacements in the same position. Feathering is specifically a toe indicator — if you feel a saw-tooth texture when running a hand across the steer tires, check alignment. Single-shoulder wear (one edge significantly lower) points to camber. Diagonal patterns on trailer tires point to trailer axle tracking. Confirming with a wheel alignment measurement is the definitive step.

How often should a semi truck be aligned?

There is no single federally mandated alignment interval. Common fleet practice includes alignment checks at major service intervals, after any significant road impact or suspension repair, when irregular wear patterns appear at the same position on consecutive tire sets, and when a driver reports pulling or handling changes. Some fleets align at each annual inspection. The practical trigger is a consistent pattern of irregular wear that cannot be explained by pressure or load — that is when alignment is most likely involved.

Does trailer alignment affect tire wear?

Yes. Trailer axle alignment is a common and frequently overlooked cause of trailer tire wear. A trailer axle that is not perpendicular to the direction of travel drags the tires at an angle, producing diagonal scrub wear. Trailers are often repaired and modified over many years, and frame or suspension damage can shift axle alignment. Trailer tires that wear rapidly or show diagonal patterns without an obvious pressure or load explanation often need a trailer axle alignment check.

Source Notes

References are used for context and verification. Exact tire service decisions should use current manufacturer data, applicable regulations, and qualified inspection.