Buick Park Avenue Grease on inner edge of tires Inspection at your home or office.

Our certified mobile mechanics come to you 7 days a week between 7 AM and 9 PM.

Estimate price near me

Service Location

Customer Ratings

(107)

How A Diagnostic Works

Instantly book a certified mobile mechanic to come to you

Mechanic diagnoses the problem and quotes necessary repairs

Your vehicle is ready to go

Fair, upfront & transparent pricing for all services

Our certified mobile mechanics can come to you now.

Customer Ratings

(107)

Grease on inner edge of tires Inspection Service

How much does a Grease on inner edge of tires Inspection cost?

On average, the cost for a Buick Park Avenue Grease on inner edge of tires Inspection is $95 with $0 for parts and $95 for labor. Prices may vary depending on your location.

CarServiceEstimateShop/Dealer Price
1999 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8LService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$114.99Shop/Dealer Price$124.99 - $132.49
2002 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8LService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$105.01 - $112.52
1994 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8LService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$105.01 - $112.52
2000 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8L TurboService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$104.99 - $112.48
2000 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8LService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$105.02 - $112.55
1992 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8LService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$105.01 - $112.52
1991 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8LService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$99.99Shop/Dealer Price$109.87 - $117.28
1998 Buick Park AvenueV6-3.8L TurboService typeGrease on inner edge of tires InspectionEstimate$99.99Shop/Dealer Price$110.24 - $117.94
Show example Buick Park Avenue Grease on inner edge of tires Inspection prices

Grease is an important protectant for many parts of your car. While it isn’t used in your engine, it is used in several other areas, including the CV joints on your axles, as well as the grease fittings on your suspension (many newer cars have sealed fittings that aren’t serviceable today). It’s also used in rear-wheel drive applications – a truck’s driveshaft may have one or even two grease fittings. However, if you’re noticing grease on the inner edge of your tires, it means that something has potentially gone wrong.

How this system works:

There are a couple of places that grease on the inner edge of your tires might have come from. The most likely is from the CV joint. CV axles, or constant velocity axles, are used in front-wheel drive cars to connect the wheel hubs to the transmission. They have two joints, one close to either end. The joints are made to be flexible, so that your car can travel over bumps and dips easily without losing traction.

The joints are flexible, and include moving parts. To protect them from damage from dust, debris and other threats, they’re covered by rubber “boots” filled with grease. This ensures that they’re constantly lubricated, and that dust and debris cannot enter and damage the joints.

However, over time, your boots wear. The rubber can become brittle from age, and can crack. Boots can also be torn through impact with debris in the road and more. When this happens, the grease can leak out, and dirt and debris can enter the joint.

Common reasons for this to happen:

  • Blown CV Boot: If you’ve noticed grease on the inner edge of your tires, there’s a chance that one of your CV boots has blown and is leaking grease out. This is a serious situation. Without grease, the joint is not properly lubricated. Even more worrying, dirt and debris can enter the CV joint and cause serious damage, requiring the entire joint to be replaced. If the situation is caught early, it’s possible that only the boot will need to be replaced.

  • Damaged Grease Fitting: Some vehicles have grease fittings on their suspension system that enable moving parts to move more easily with lubrication. If one of these is damaged, it’s possible that some of the grease may leak onto the edge of your wheel from a nearby grease fitting.

  • Recent Lubrication of Grease Fittings: Once upon a time, an “oil and lube” service really lived up to its name, with all of a car’s grease fittings being lubricated during normal maintenance. With most newer cars now having sealed systems, this has become less common. However, if your car has serviceable fittings, it’s possible that grease from a recent service somehow ended up on the inner edge of the tire.

  • Recent CV Boot or Axle Replacement: If you’ve already had a CV boot blow out and the axle has been rebooted, or a new CV axle has been installed, it’s possible that the mechanic did not clean off the inner edge of the tire after the repair.

What to expect:

A top-rated mobile mechanic will come to your home or office to inspect the CV axles, boots, grease fittings and more. The mechanic will then provide a detailed inspection report that includes the scope and cost of the necessary repairs.

How it's done:

The mechanic will inspect your CV axles and boots, as well as any grease fittings on your front suspension in order to determine the source of the grease on the inner edge of your tires. The mechanic may also need to test drive the vehicle to test for symptoms of a failed CV joint, which include clicking during turning, or a vibration while driving.

How important is this service?

If the problem is with your CV boots, having the situation corrected is critical. While it’s possible to reboot a CV axle before the boot blows entirely, or immediately afterward, any use of the vehicle with the boot blown can contaminate the CV joint with dust and dirt. This will eat into the joint itself, causing irreparable damage and requiring the entire axle to be replaced. If you’ve noticed grease on the inner edge of your tires, one of our professional mechanics can diagnose and repair the condition.

Fast and easy service at your home or office

Backed by 12-month, 12.000-mile guarantee


Meet some of our expert Buick mechanics

Real customer reviews from Buick owners like you.

Excellent Rating

(107)

Rating Summary
100
5
1
0
1
100
5
1
0
1

Miguel

35 years of experience
258 reviews
Miguel
35 years of experience
Buick Park Avenue V6-3.8L Turbo - Starter - Jacksonville, Florida
Quick and easy. Miguel showed up an hour early and got to work immediately. He told everything that was wrong and provided insight on what I should do next.

Howard

30 years of experience
92 reviews
Howard
30 years of experience
Buick Park Avenue V6-3.8L - Valve Cover Gasket - Tucker, Georgia
He arrived early, worked in a timely manner, and was easy to talk to. Good experience!

Carlos

17 years of experience
57 reviews
Carlos
17 years of experience
Buick Park Avenue V6-3.8L - Brake Pads Replacement (Front) - Lathrop, California
Carlis told me ahead of time that he could be available earlier than 3 pm which worked great. He explained possible outcomes so no surprises. He completed job well within expected time Carlos is a great mechanic!

David

22 years of experience
67 reviews
David
22 years of experience
Buick Park Avenue V6-3.8L Turbo - Car AC Repair - Lawrenceville, Georgia
I ranked David highly on Professionalism and satisfied with his Diagnosis. One caveat, and has nothing to do with David. I feel that I really am not qualified to make these judgments, as I have had no dealing with automotive AC issues in the last 15 years. So my ratings are mostly based on observations with actual knowledge of what he was doing.

Excellent Rating

(107)

Rating Summary
100
5
1
0
1
100
5
1
0
1
Number of Buick Park Avenue services completed
1177+
services done by our mechanics
TOTAL NUMBER OF EXPERT Buick MECHANICS
800+
experts on our platform

Recent articles & questions

Symptoms of a Bad or Failing Cruise Control Vacuum Reservoir
Common signs include speed surges and inability to maintain speed on cruise control, as well as general engine performance issues.
Symptoms of a Bad or Failing Parking Brake Drum
If your car's parking brakes don't hold or just work poorly overall, you may need to replace the parking brake drum.
P0970 OBD-II Trouble Code: Pressure Control Solenoid “C” Control Circuit Low
P0970 means there is a discrepancy between the desired hydraulic pressure and the actual hydraulic pressure due to faulty solenoids.

Clutch line not bleeding

The clutch and brakes don't use the same master cylinder. They both use brake fluid, but that is the only things they have in common as far as parts go. The clutch will have its own master cylinder, line and...

When stopping at slow speeds the abs feels like they are engaging.

Hello. If you've already cleaned the sensors with soap and water then you probably won't need to clean them again with stronger chemicals. The ABS sensors function as magnetic type sensors, and only need to be clean and free of...

Code P1778.

Hello P1778 is the code for an issue with the stepper motor function. The CVT transmission on this vehicle uses a 4 position stepper motor to propel the vehicle. If the stepper motor goes bad, or has an issue it...

How can we help?

Our service team is available 7 days a week, Monday - Friday from 6 AM to 5 PM PST, Saturday - Sunday 7 AM - 4 PM PST.

1 (844) 997-3624 · hi@yourmechanic.com