You just spent good money on a fresh set of tires. The shop mounted and balanced them, you drove off feeling great, and then it happened — a subtle vibration in the steering wheel that shows up around 60 mph and never quite goes away. You bring it back, they rebalance, and the vibration persists. Sound familiar? The problem might not be balance at all. It might be something only a Road Force balancer can detect.
Standard Balancing vs Road Force Balancing
Standard tire balancing has been around for decades and works well for most situations. The technician mounts your wheel and tire assembly on a spin balancer, which rotates it at high speed and measures where the heavy spots are. Small clip-on or adhesive weights are added to counteract those heavy spots, and the assembly spins evenly. Job done.
Road Force balancing goes further. A Hunter Road Force Elite balancer does everything a standard machine does, then adds a critical extra step: it presses a large roller against the tire with approximately 1,400 pounds of force to simulate the weight of your vehicle on the road. While the tire spins under load, sensors measure force variation — differences in stiffness and shape around the circumference of the tire and wheel.
This loaded test reveals problems that a standard spin balance simply cannot see. A tire can be perfectly weight-balanced and still produce vibration if it has a stiff spot in the sidewall or if the wheel is slightly out of round. Road Force balancing catches both.
What Causes Tire Vibration?
There are three main sources of vibration in a wheel and tire assembly, and understanding them explains why Road Force balancing is so effective.
- Weight Imbalance: This is the classic problem. One side of the assembly is heavier than the other, causing it to wobble at speed. Standard balancing fixes this by adding counterweights. Most vibration complaints start here.
- Tire Force Variation: Even a brand-new tire is not perfectly uniform. Manufacturing processes can leave subtle stiff spots in the sidewall or tread area. These stiff spots push harder against the road at certain points in each rotation, creating a rhythmic pulse you feel as vibration. Standard balancing cannot detect force variation because it does not load the tire.
- Rim Runout: Wheels can be slightly bent or out of round, especially alloy wheels that have encountered potholes. Even a small amount of lateral or radial runout produces vibration at highway speeds. The Road Force machine measures runout precisely and can identify whether the vibration source is the tire, the wheel, or a combination of both.
The Road Force balancer measures all three of these factors simultaneously and provides a single Road Force reading in pounds. A reading under 15 lbs is excellent. Readings above 25 lbs are typically noticeable to the driver. The machine even shows the technician exactly how to reposition the tire on the wheel to minimize the combined force variation — a technique called match mounting that can turn a mediocre assembly into a smooth one without replacing anything.
When Should You Get Road Force Balancing?
Not every tire installation requires Road Force balancing, but certain situations benefit from it significantly:
- New tire installation: This is the best time to catch problems. If a tire has excessive force variation, you want to know before you drive 5,000 miles on it. Catching it early means the shop can warranty the tire or match-mount it for a smooth ride from day one.
- Persistent vibration after standard balancing: If a shop has balanced your tires two or three times and the vibration remains, force variation or rim runout is almost certainly the culprit. Road Force balancing will identify the exact source.
- Premium wheels (20 inches and larger): Larger diameter wheels are more sensitive to force variation because the tire sidewall is shorter and stiffer. There is less rubber to absorb irregularities, so precision matters more.
- Highway commuters: If you spend significant time on I-435, I-35, K-10, or any highway in the Kansas City metro, even a small vibration becomes noticeable and fatiguing over a 30-minute commute. Road Force balancing ensures your daily drive is as smooth as possible.
How Much Does It Cost?
The price difference between standard and Road Force balancing is smaller than most people expect:
- Standard balance: Typically $15 to $25 per tire
- Road Force balance: Typically $25 to $40 per tire
For a set of four tires, you are looking at roughly $40 to $60 extra for Road Force balancing. When you consider that a new set of truck tires costs $800 to $2,000 or more, spending a few extra dollars to ensure they ride perfectly is a smart investment. See our Road Force balancing service and pricing. We also offer standard tire balancing for vehicles where it is the right fit.
We Have the Hunter Road Force Elite
Not every tire shop in Kansas City has a Road Force balancer. The Hunter Road Force Elite is a premium piece of equipment, and many shops rely on standard spin balancers because they are cheaper and faster. We invested in the Road Force Elite because we believe our customers deserve the best possible ride quality, especially on the large wheel and tire packages that trucks and SUVs run.
Our technicians are trained to read and act on Road Force data, including match-mounting tires to wheels for the lowest possible force variation. If a tire comes back with a high reading, we will show you the data and walk you through your options before you leave the shop. View all of our tire services.
Get a Smoother Ride Today
Whether you are installing new tires or chasing a vibration that standard balancing has not fixed, Road Force balancing is the answer. Call us at 913-291-2027 or stop by American Fusion Wheels at 12310 W 62nd Ter, Shawnee KS 66216. We will get your wheels spinning smooth.



















