Originally Posted by tn06
Yes, no-brainer, I have checked tire pressure, 32psi in front, 33psi in rear, and I have driven 600 miles to seat them, and NO you should not move the front tires and wheels to rear or rear to front, Crossfire front wheels are 18" and the rear are 19". As I said in my original post, I swapped the front directional tires and mounted wheels from left to right and the right one to the left for a test drive and it still drifted to right on level ground. That means the front directional tires were turning the WRONG way for the test drive. We did put two different new sets of Michelin's on the front. I do like Michelin tires, I have been running them on every car that I have owned for the last 27 years. I did wonder if a non directional tire would be any better?
Sorry, but this condition only changed when you put on new tires...alignment is correct, tire pressure is correct, but what did change? You stated no matter what you did, changing tires, etc didn't help...it isn't the tires. I will bet you if you change brand of tires, it will pull the same. Something happened when they had the rims off the car...does it feel like it tracks straight while braking? If it tracks straight while braking, or if it pulls hard to one side while braking, I would look at the brakes first before changing tires...if one brake is grabbing, even the slightest, it will make the car pull that direction...they had the rims off, then remounted the rims back on...could have moved or caused something to change on the calipers...just a thought...