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-   -   Tire brand recommendations (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=51249)

arashishozen 11-13-2013 04:47 AM

Tire brand recommendations
 
It's that time to buy tires. What brand and type of tire, and mileage do y'all recommend?

Wise 11-13-2013 05:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arashishozen (Post 1328545)
It's that time to buy tires. What brand and type of tire, and mileage do y'all recommend?

What size tyre do you want? What purpose? Track? Daily? Winter? All Season? Summer?

lavisxice 11-13-2013 06:13 AM

continental dw!

ZionsWrath 11-13-2013 06:15 AM

Just get something from tire rack

arashishozen 11-13-2013 07:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wise (Post 1328585)
What size tyre do you want? What purpose? Track? Daily? Winter? All Season? Summer?

Im not sure what size to get or what sizes could fit. What size do you recommend? I have stock rims by the way. I suppose daily all season tires, though I dont plan on driving it all the time ( thats what my Bronco is for) Im looking for something that grips pretty well too as I do enjoy spirited rides through the country side.
Thanks.

enouf 11-13-2013 08:09 AM

Summer tire - Michelin Pilot Super Sports 215/45/17 (or 225 for more meat), both of which will fit just fine on stock rims.

Wise 11-13-2013 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arashishozen (Post 1328616)
Im not sure what size to get or what sizes could fit. What size do you recommend? I have stock rims by the way. I suppose daily all season tires, though I dont plan on driving it all the time ( thats what my Bronco is for) Im looking for something that grips pretty well too as I do enjoy spirited rides through the country side.
Thanks.

225/45/17 Michelin Pilot Super Sports if you've got the cash.

arashishozen 11-13-2013 08:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by enouf (Post 1328639)
Summer tire - Michelin Pilot Super Sports 215/45/17 (or 225 for more meat), both of which will fit just fine on stock rims.

How would Summer tires hold up in the winter and vice versa?
My dd is quite old and who knows when.id have to drive in the snow ,etc and I dont want to.have to buy several sets of tires just to drive it year round. ( unless I drive that much =0 )

ZionsWrath 11-13-2013 08:24 AM

If you only want 1 set I'd recommend all seasons and stay home when it is actually snowing.

If you are strapped for cash I'd say buy a set of someone OEM wheel (or steelies) and mount General Altimax Arctic winter tires and put them on if you need to drive in the snow.

arashishozen 11-13-2013 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZionsWrath (Post 1328652)
If you only want 1 set I'd recommend all seasons and stay home when it is actually snowing.

If you are strapped for cash I'd say buy a set of someone OEM wheel (or steelies) and mount General Altimax Arctic winter tires and put them on if you need to drive in the snow.

As a general rule there would only be two occurrences that id have to drive in the snow. A to get to work bc Nissan wont ever shut down and two if it snows when im on vacation during schedule shutdown at nissan.

I live in Tn so as a general rule we dont get much snow. Just mainly the worse of the two evils...black ice

ZDan 11-13-2013 11:05 AM

Don't fixate on brand name. Every major brand makes some good tires, some crap tires. Focus on what your specific wants/needs/usage and pick the best specific tire model for that at the lowest price. www.tirerack.com is your friend. Loads of test info, customer surveys, and reviews. Pay particular attention to WET grip! Plenty of tires that have good dry grip and suck in the wet. You want tires with very good wet grip for a dd street car.

If ultimate performance isn't that big a concern, and you will be driving in the cold months, and the possibility exists that you might have to drive in snow or cold/wet or ice (!!!) conditions, UHP all-seasons are probably the way to go. Although on black ice, god help you in any case :P

No reason not to get OEM size: 215/45-17. But you could also go with 225/45-17 if price is favorable or if the tire that suits your needs best is only available in that size.

Faced with similar demands to yours for my wife's Mazda3, I got General G-Max AS-03 tires a year ago. No complaints!
http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tests/...y.jsp?ttid=151

Suberman 11-13-2013 11:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arashishozen (Post 1328653)
As a general rule there would only be two occurrences that id have to drive in the snow. A to get to work bc Nissan wont ever shut down and two if it snows when im on vacation during schedule shutdown at nissan.

I live in Tn so as a general rule we dont get much snow. Just mainly the worse of the two evils...black ice

If you get black ice the only tire that will work (without metal studs) is a Q or R rated studless winter tire. The stickiest ice tire available is the Blizzak W line of tires. These are awful to drive on and after they are half worn they are no longer fit for winter. However, they are a true ice tire.

I won't put bridgestones on any car of mine but many people like them.

The next tier up which are also decent to drive in are Michelin X Ice, Nokian Hakkapelitta, Continental ExtremeWinter Contact and similar. The General tire recommended is excellent also (General is a Continental subsidiary) and Hankook Ice Bears get good reviews.

ZionsWrath 11-13-2013 11:11 AM

General altimax arctic is Q rated (99 mph), very soft. No fun in the dry lol

ZDan 11-13-2013 12:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Suberman (Post 1328823)
I won't put bridgestones on any car of mine but many people like them.

Why not?
Bridgestone makes some GREAT tires, including the RE11A, S-04, RE970AS, etc.
They also make tires that are UTTER CRAP, particularly the OEM all-season tire for the FR-S/BRZ: Turanza EL400-02 (that tire is probably the only reason we didn't get the wife a new Mazda3 this year).

But *every* manufacturer makes some tires that are pretty much CRAP.

Falling into Brand X vs. Brand Y thinking only increases chances of making a sub-optimal choice. You cannot guarantee a good tire going only by brand, and if you do go by brand you are eliminating a lot of good tires from consideration.

It's critical to know about the *specific tire model* you are considering. You can't just go by brand name or even model line (Bridgestone "Potenza", Goodyear "Eagle", BFGoodrich "G-Force", Firestone "Firehawk" are not specific tires, they are a very broad/wide range of tires, some of which are probably great, some of which are likely not so great).

Advice like: "I've always gotten Goodyear Eagles, they're great tires" or "I had a set of Kumho Ecstas and they sucked" is pretty much meaningless because there are both good and bad tires that go by those names.


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