Mercedes-Benz E450 Tires are losing contact with the road 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

(5,558)

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

(5,558)

Tires are losing contact with the road Inspection Service

How much does a Tires are losing contact with the road Inspection cost?

On average, the cost for a Mercedes-Benz E450 Tires are losing contact with the road Inspection is $95 with $0 for parts and $95 for labor. Prices may vary depending on your location.

CarServiceEstimateShop/Dealer Price
2021 Mercedes-Benz E450L6-3.0L Turbo HybridService typeTires are losing contact with the road InspectionEstimate$114.99Shop/Dealer Price$124.99 - $132.49
2020 Mercedes-Benz E450V6-3.0L TurboService typeTires are losing contact with the road InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$105.01 - $112.52
2019 Mercedes-Benz E450V6-3.0L TurboService typeTires are losing contact with the road InspectionEstimate$94.99Shop/Dealer Price$105.01 - $112.52
Show example Mercedes-Benz E450 Tires are losing contact with the road Inspection prices

Having one of your tires lose contact with the road is both frightening and dangerous. There’s a reason that cars have four wheels, and when you’re down to only three, the car can feel out of control and hard to maneuver. Losing contact with the road usually happens during adverse weather conditions. For example, water on the road can cause your car to hydroplane.

How this system works:

Your vehicle is equipped with a traction control system to help you drive safely during rainy or icy weather. The traction control system determines when one of your wheels is not making contact with the road. Rather than continuing to send power to that useless wheel, the traction control system disperses power to your other three wheels, so that you can maintain maximum control of your car.

Common reasons for this to happen:

When it feels like your tires are losing contact with the road, it is usually the traction control system. Sometimes, however, it’s a problem with the tires. These are the most common culprits of a tire losing contact with the road:

  • Dirty or damaged wheel speed sensors: Your traction control system relies on information from the wheel speed sensors. The wheel speed sensors are small sensors that exist in each wheel, and track how quickly the wheel is spinning. Your anti-lock brake and speedometer systems rely on these sensors, and so does the traction control system. When the wheel speed sensors note that one wheel is performing differently than the other three – which occurs when a wheel loses contact with the road – then it sends information to the traction control system to send more power to the other wheels.

  • Malfunctioning engine control unit: The engine control unit is your car’s computer. Among its many other responsibilities, it takes information from the speed wheel sensors, and uses it to control the power dispersal to the wheel. Without a functioning engine control unit, your traction control system has no command or power.

  • Underinflated tires: When your tires don’t have enough air pressure in them, they are more susceptible to lose contact with the road. Low air pressure makes it difficult for cars to have good traction, and therefore easier to hydroplane.

  • Tires have poor treading: Tires that have lost most of their treading have the same problem as underinflated tires. They have a hard time maintaining traction, and as a result, they can lose contact with the road.

What to expect:

A top-rated mobile mechanic will come to your home or office to determine the cause of the tire losing contact with the road, and will then provide a detailed inspection report that includes the scope and cost of the necessary repairs.

How it's done:

When you schedule an inspection because a tire is losing contact with the road, a mechanic will thoroughly inspect your tires and your traction control system. If the problem is worn tires, or a faulty traction control system, then the components will need to be replaced. If the tires are merely underinflated, then they can be inflated to the proper air pressure.

How important is this service?

Driving with a tire that isn’t making contact with the road is not only scary, but dangerous. Your car relies on having even power distribution to all four wheels, and eliminating one wheel’s contact with the road immediately puts you and your car in a hazardous situation.

Fast and easy service at your home or office

Backed by 12-month, 12.000-mile guarantee


Meet some of our expert Mercedes-Benz mechanics

Real customer reviews from Mercedes-Benz owners like you.

Excellent Rating

(5,558)

Rating Summary
5,170
189
54
28
117
5,170
189
54
28
117

Ronald

20 years of experience
10 reviews
Ronald
20 years of experience
Mercedes-Benz GL350 V6-3.0L Turbo Diesel - Strut Assembly Replacement (Front) - Fullerton, California
Ronald was professional and knowledgeable. I will definitely use his services and Yourmechanic.com again.

Blissel

4 years of experience
38 reviews
Blissel
4 years of experience
Mercedes-Benz ML350 V6-3.7L - Electrical components are not working - Weston, Florida
Exelent as Mechanic and as person, he was able to find the problem and provide a diagnose for it, today I will get more information on the parts needed.

Arturo

27 years of experience
303 reviews
Arturo
27 years of experience
Mercedes-Benz E350 V6-3.5L - Check Engine Light is on - Chula Vista, California
Arturo, is very good at what he does. You are very lucky to have him working for you.

Clifton

30 years of experience
289 reviews
Clifton
30 years of experience
Mercedes-Benz SLK350 V6-3.5L - Battery - Boca Raton, Florida
Great. Clifton replaced battery and was careful with my car's exterior. Performed a maintenance check and corrected tire pressure. Will use again.

Excellent Rating

(5,558)

Rating Summary
5,170
189
54
28
117
5,170
189
54
28
117
Number of Mercedes-Benz services completed
61138+
services done by our mechanics
TOTAL NUMBER OF EXPERT Mercedes-Benz MECHANICS
1100+
experts on our platform

Recent articles & questions

Is It Unsafe to Continue Driving a Vehicle with Broken Wheel Speed Sensors?
Car wheel speed sensors are an important safety feature. It helps the ABS system work when you need to make an emergency stop.
How to Get Better Sound Out of the System in Your Car
With With factory sound systems getting better and better, it isn’t always necessary to replace the system for ultra-high quality sound. There is, however, always room for improvement, so you can rock out to your favorite tunes on your daily...
P2290 OBD-II Trouble Code: Injector Control Pressure Too Low
What the P2290 code means? P2290 is an OBD-II generic code for the engine control module (ECM) detecting the injector control pressure...

I have an oil leak and a low oil pressure light on.

Sounds like it could be the oil pressure sensor. Have a technician test the sensor to determine if it needs to be replaced (https://www.yourmechanic.com/services/oil-pressure-sensor-replacement). I definitely would not drive it until that is checked because you could do damage to...

Suburban idling high and won't accelerate

The symptoms that you are experiencing with your Chevy have lead me to believe that your Suburban is experiencing issues with its’ Throttle Position Sensor (https://www.yourmechanic.com/services/throttle-position-sensor-replacement) (TPS). If the TPS is failing, it will duplicate many of the symptoms that...

car loses power, hesitates, and miss fires

From the symptoms described, it does seem that your BMW is unfortunately experiencing engine misfires. However the source of these misfires can really be caused by multiple sources, from worn out spark plugs, to even a failing mass air flow...

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