W
wayne1965xxxx
Hello all,
I've done a search on winter tyres and there seems to be more questions than answers.
There is even one link to a demo on indoor ski slope 4x4 compared to 4x2 winter and summer etc. (that I can not access btw)
Then clearly tyres are your point of contact and much more important than 4x4 ... both is that much better
Getting moving on a slope is one issue but stopping in control is MORE important.
I live in the French alpes and have been using winter / summer tyre rotation on multiple cars, twingo / clio sport/ espace 4 and now a cali T6 2019 4x4 DGS 198
Then my advice would be ....
1. get winter tyres if you're going to spend any significant time in or near snow .. chains are a life saver ... but invariably they get fitted when it's too late
1.1 mixed season - Michelin cross-climate are a good alternative if your an occasional visitor
2. tyre depth for winter >> tyre tread depth for summer I would say 4mm min for winter (2mm for summer)
3. keep used winter tyres (<4mm) for use in summer months
4. I noticed my new tyres (Michelin Agilis) have 8mm of tread impressive compared to my clio which has 6mm when new
5. Get a good brand (Michelin/Continental/Hankook etc.) ... compare with the cost of driving off the road ONE time !!
6. GET FOUR tyres ..... think about stopping, not starting ... I have a spare set of wheels for each car!!
7. Wheel rotation ..... generally I only buy TWO new tyres each year, the part worn tyres go on the back and new ones on the front ... HOWEVER ... with a van... it's not the same beast as a twingo.... at nearly 3 tons you have to focus on stopping stopping stopping before that stone wall or corner or .... THEN .... I am rethinking.... Is it better to have the new tyres on the back.... it's pretty alarming when the back wants to over-take the front and with the 4x4 the back will still push you up that hill ...... ANY COMMENTS ???
8. Tyre pressure ..... generally stay with normal pressure ~3.7 bars ..... you can drop air on the side of the road if you where is difficulty .. I never did that.
9. BTW, it's now the LAW to have winter tyres in the alpes in the winter.... previously it was strongly advised and only enforced when the roads where clearly very bad.
I've done a search on winter tyres and there seems to be more questions than answers.
There is even one link to a demo on indoor ski slope 4x4 compared to 4x2 winter and summer etc. (that I can not access btw)
Then clearly tyres are your point of contact and much more important than 4x4 ... both is that much better
Getting moving on a slope is one issue but stopping in control is MORE important.
I live in the French alpes and have been using winter / summer tyre rotation on multiple cars, twingo / clio sport/ espace 4 and now a cali T6 2019 4x4 DGS 198
Then my advice would be ....
1. get winter tyres if you're going to spend any significant time in or near snow .. chains are a life saver ... but invariably they get fitted when it's too late
1.1 mixed season - Michelin cross-climate are a good alternative if your an occasional visitor
2. tyre depth for winter >> tyre tread depth for summer I would say 4mm min for winter (2mm for summer)
3. keep used winter tyres (<4mm) for use in summer months
4. I noticed my new tyres (Michelin Agilis) have 8mm of tread impressive compared to my clio which has 6mm when new
5. Get a good brand (Michelin/Continental/Hankook etc.) ... compare with the cost of driving off the road ONE time !!
6. GET FOUR tyres ..... think about stopping, not starting ... I have a spare set of wheels for each car!!
7. Wheel rotation ..... generally I only buy TWO new tyres each year, the part worn tyres go on the back and new ones on the front ... HOWEVER ... with a van... it's not the same beast as a twingo.... at nearly 3 tons you have to focus on stopping stopping stopping before that stone wall or corner or .... THEN .... I am rethinking.... Is it better to have the new tyres on the back.... it's pretty alarming when the back wants to over-take the front and with the 4x4 the back will still push you up that hill ...... ANY COMMENTS ???
8. Tyre pressure ..... generally stay with normal pressure ~3.7 bars ..... you can drop air on the side of the road if you where is difficulty .. I never did that.
9. BTW, it's now the LAW to have winter tyres in the alpes in the winter.... previously it was strongly advised and only enforced when the roads where clearly very bad.