dexterlh
New member
- First Name
- Dexter
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2025
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 2
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Baltimore
- Vehicles
- cybertruck
- Thread starter
- #1
Hey everyone,
I recently swapped my Cybertruck’s wheels/tires and wanted to get some input from others who have gone aftermarket. I’m running 24x10 wheels with 35x12.50R24 tires (lower offset than OEM), and almost immediately after the swap I started hearing suspension noise from the control arm/ball joint area — mostly when stationary while braking and turning the wheel at the same time.
My truck only has about 8,000 miles, so this feels way too early for control arm or ball joint wear. I’ve got a Tesla service appointment scheduled for 9/23, but I’m also going back to the tire shop to double-check torque, hub-centric fitment, and clearance.
My concern is: will Tesla point to the aftermarket wheels/tires as the cause and refuse to cover this under warranty? I know under Magnuson-Moss they technically have to prove the aftermarket part caused the issue, but I’ve seen mixed experiences on how Tesla service handles cases like this.
Questions for the group:
Would love to hear others’ experiences before I go in.
Thanks!
I recently swapped my Cybertruck’s wheels/tires and wanted to get some input from others who have gone aftermarket. I’m running 24x10 wheels with 35x12.50R24 tires (lower offset than OEM), and almost immediately after the swap I started hearing suspension noise from the control arm/ball joint area — mostly when stationary while braking and turning the wheel at the same time.
My truck only has about 8,000 miles, so this feels way too early for control arm or ball joint wear. I’ve got a Tesla service appointment scheduled for 9/23, but I’m also going back to the tire shop to double-check torque, hub-centric fitment, and clearance.
My concern is: will Tesla point to the aftermarket wheels/tires as the cause and refuse to cover this under warranty? I know under Magnuson-Moss they technically have to prove the aftermarket part caused the issue, but I’ve seen mixed experiences on how Tesla service handles cases like this.
Questions for the group:
- Has anyone else experienced control arm or suspension noise this early (with or without aftermarket wheels)?
- Did Tesla honor the warranty, or did they blame aftermarket parts?
- Any tips for how to frame the service appointment so it gets handled under warranty?
Would love to hear others’ experiences before I go in.
Thanks!
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