Hi all, I found the rear tyres on the c5 have excess wear on the inner shoulder as though the toe is excessive. These are 3 year old tyres and have done about 19k miles.
Checked just now with the track ace and the rear shows as being 30 degree minutes toe out at the rear. It's a bit toe out but I wouldn't have thought that was very excessive (?) What is it supposed to be?
Given that there is no toe adjustment at the rear I wondered if a suspension bush or two had gone.
I have had a quick look and a go at each rubber bushing with a pry bar and none seem particularly movable.
I do notice that there as a bit of camber at the rear - compared with the occasional Peugeot 407 I see that has the same subframe, arms and hubs - that could contribute to inner shoulder wear but wouldn't have considered it excessive and actually I would think excess camber would show up as a collapsed arm bush anyway ,(of course I may have missed it)
Any ideas about this?
C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
-
aerodynamica
- (Donor 2025)
- Posts: 1685
- Joined: 26 Dec 2007, 18:10
- x 215
C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Graeme M
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
-
GiveMeABreak
- (Donor 2016)
- Posts: 41989
- Joined: 15 Sep 2015, 19:38
- x 6956
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
For reference:
X7 Rear Axle Geometry
Rear Axle
X7 Rear Axle Geometry
| Checking Values | |
| Tyres | 225/60 R 16 |
| “ | 225/55 R 17 |
| “ | 245/45 R 18 |
| “ | 245/40 R 19 |
| Camber (not adjustable) | -1°16' ± 0°30' |
| Thrust angle | 0° ± 0°30' |
| Tracking at the axle (adjustable) | 0°34' ± 0°09' |
| Camber dissymmetry | ± 0°30' |
Rear Axle
| Rear Hub | Rear Suspension Geometry |
Please note, I'm no longer active on the Forum, so won't respond to messages.
Marc
Marc
-
aerodynamica
- (Donor 2025)
- Posts: 1685
- Joined: 26 Dec 2007, 18:10
- x 215
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Hi Marc, thanks. According to that the toe is correct. Not measured the camber angle yet
Graeme M
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
-
Svod
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 28 Mar 2023, 14:35
- x 22
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Hi,
I was salso struggling with this and there is a solution. I made a new center piece for 517847 (front adjustable arm for toe) and made the rar arm adjustable too. This way you are able to adjust also the rear camber.
I was salso struggling with this and there is a solution. I made a new center piece for 517847 (front adjustable arm for toe) and made the rar arm adjustable too. This way you are able to adjust also the rear camber.
-
wurlycorner
- Donor 2024
- Posts: 2177
- Joined: 30 Oct 2012, 22:37
- x 272
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Nice modification to resolve it - did you get to the bottom of what you thought might be the original cause (which couldn't be fixed because no adjustment)?
--
Iain
'85 CX GTi Turbo s1 (met. blue)
2x '85 CX GTi Turbo s2 t1 (met. silver & grey)
'88 CX GTi Turbo s2 T2 (met. light blue)
CX DTR T2 Safari (silver)
2x '96 Xantia Activa (Black & met. green)
'01 C5 2.0 HDi LX Estate (Blue)
'11 C5 X7 3.0 V6 Exclusive Tourer
Iain
'85 CX GTi Turbo s1 (met. blue)
2x '85 CX GTi Turbo s2 t1 (met. silver & grey)
'88 CX GTi Turbo s2 T2 (met. light blue)
CX DTR T2 Safari (silver)
2x '96 Xantia Activa (Black & met. green)
'01 C5 2.0 HDi LX Estate (Blue)
'11 C5 X7 3.0 V6 Exclusive Tourer
-
Svod
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 28 Mar 2023, 14:35
- x 22
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
I replaced all the rubber components in the rear suspension, but the camber was still out of tolerance. The car continued to wear both rear tyres on the inner edge and felt unstable—especially when cornering and hitting a pothole, where it would become noticeably 'jumpy'.
Even after fitting brand new rear arms (item number 2 in the "Rear Suspension Geometry" diagram), fully refurbishing the rear axle, installing new spheres, and setting the correct ride height, the issue remained unchanged.
What caused it? I believe the most likely reason is material fatigue in the entire rear axle assembly. Over time, the structural integrity may have weakened to the point where alignment issues couldn't be resolved through standard refurbishment. But these are only my thoughts.
As a result, I decided to approach it differently—similar to how some other car brands naturally address this OEM. Nowadays, whenever I refurbish a rear axle, I install these by default.
Even after fitting brand new rear arms (item number 2 in the "Rear Suspension Geometry" diagram), fully refurbishing the rear axle, installing new spheres, and setting the correct ride height, the issue remained unchanged.
What caused it? I believe the most likely reason is material fatigue in the entire rear axle assembly. Over time, the structural integrity may have weakened to the point where alignment issues couldn't be resolved through standard refurbishment. But these are only my thoughts.
As a result, I decided to approach it differently—similar to how some other car brands naturally address this OEM. Nowadays, whenever I refurbish a rear axle, I install these by default.
-
Kees
- Donor 2024
- Posts: 562
- Joined: 16 Nov 2021, 16:16
- x 144
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
A dealer here in the Netherlands, make the same modification.
-
Svod
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 28 Mar 2023, 14:35
- x 22
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
I have made a bunch of them if anyone interested. Solid steel, zinc plated.
-
Paul-R
- Moderating Team
- Posts: 8986
- Joined: 07 May 2009, 16:24
- x 1868
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Couldn't see on the photo but are the threads matched LH and RH? Did you make the LH and RH nut assemblies and then weld them onto the remains of the old tie bars?
Excellent bit of work BTW.
Excellent bit of work BTW.
As I get older I think a lot about the hereafter - I go into a room and then wonder what I'm here after.
Inside every old person is a young person wondering what the hell happened.
"Trying is the first step towards failure" ~ Homer J Simpson
Inside every old person is a young person wondering what the hell happened.
"Trying is the first step towards failure" ~ Homer J Simpson
-
Svod
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 28 Mar 2023, 14:35
- x 22
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Tie bar is brand new and have L+R thread. The way I finish it is that I use older 'front' adjustable nuts with new silentblocks, or brand new front adjustables (PN 517847) from which i remove the center bar and insert new one. I also install new nut securing bolts from stainless steel with hexagonal head.
-
Kees
- Donor 2024
- Posts: 562
- Joined: 16 Nov 2021, 16:16
- x 144
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
I like to get a pair of them, will you send them to the Netherlands?
-
Svod
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 28 Mar 2023, 14:35
- x 22
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Have some. Shipping to Netherlands should not be problem. PM me.
-
aerodynamica
- (Donor 2025)
- Posts: 1685
- Joined: 26 Dec 2007, 18:10
- x 215
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
That's very impressiveSvod wrote: 09 Jul 2025, 08:03 Hi,
I was salso struggling with this and there is a solution. I made a new center piece for 517847 (front adjustable arm for toe) and made the rar arm adjustable too. This way you are able to adjust also the rear camber.
![]()
Graeme M
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
-
aerodynamica
- (Donor 2025)
- Posts: 1685
- Joined: 26 Dec 2007, 18:10
- x 215
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
It's a great piece of work there. Did you ever find out what really makes the camber go so bad? I kind of thought it was the upper arm rubber bushes compressing inward and the lower ones pulling outward over time.
Graeme M
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
2008 C5 Exclusive Tourer 2.0 HDi
-
Svod
- Posts: 17
- Joined: 28 Mar 2023, 14:35
- x 22
Re: C5x7 extreme tyre wear at rear
Thank you! I had a similar opinion on this. Unfortunatelly when i changed the silentblocks on the upper arms (with all other ones on the rear) it help just little bit. Camber was still out of the tolerance. Thing is that when alignment guy was setting the toe it changes also the camber. So there were 2 options: make a compromise between camber and toe on rear, or make camber adjustable too. It takes little bit more time to set the rear properly now as camber influences toe and vice versa, but the change when riding is noticeable.