Winter Tires

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old July-21st-2003, 11:32 AM
  #16  
Registered User
 
DaleK's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Atlanta, formerly Calgary
Posts: 363
DaleK is on a distinguished road
Originally posted by JorynnRace
Since our cars are front wheel drive, is there any point in getting all four wheels replaced with winter tires, or will the front 2 suffice for the winter?

I'm cheap. hehe

But I'll do whats best fo sho.
As others have said, it is absoluteky CRITICAL to have all 4 tires winters on a fwd car. If you were to mix and match all seasons and winters on a fwd car, you would want to put the winters on the back. The traction at the back has to be equvalent/better than the front to prevent the back end from sliding out.

I'll tell you a story - I bought a rabbit convertible a few tears back. It still had the original Eagle GT's on the back (14 years and 89000 kms on them), and some fairly well worn winter tires on the front. How they got that combination I don't know. I decided to 'see how it would go' at the start of winter because I was being cheap. This would be an equivalent situation to what you propose. Well after driving down a moderately icy road that was level and flat and the back end swinging out when I had gas applied, I bought 4 winter tires the next day. I had been driving in winters, mostly on all season tires, for over 10 years at that point and had never been frightened by vehicle dynamics before.

This spring, we had some really nasty rain then ice then snow conditions, and with the same car on the winter tires, there were some spots that I would let off the gas and the front tires would lock (no brakes applied), but the back end didn't swing out and I could maintain control. If I had the winters on front, summers on back deal like I had when I bought the car, I would have most likely done a 360 into the cars ahead of me.

Sorry for the long post, I felt obliged to relate some experience, as it is very much a safety issue. If you are contemplating 2 winters only, I would suggest leave all 4 Dunlops on instead.

Dale.
DaleK is offline  
Old July-21st-2003, 12:13 PM
  #17  
Protege Newbie
 
pierreasdf's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 8
pierreasdf is on a distinguished road
The WR are true winter tires that have received the official winter logo from Transport Canada (check http://www.tc.gc.ca/roadsafety/topic...isf.htm#Nokian). Of course, since Nokian are trying to make these tires also usable in summer (with harder silica), they probably won't be as good as the Hakka 1 in winter times. BTW, I have a set of Hakka 1 as winter tires, and I love them, but should the WR prove to be enough secure for me in harsh winter conditions, I will keep the WR on my car as they are a lot more fun to drive than the Hakka 1. Of course, security is always the main concern in winter, and I will put the Hakka 1 on my car if the WR don't give me satisfaction; but I will give them a chance ...

Pierre
pierreasdf is offline  
Old July-24th-2003, 12:55 PM
  #18  
mine is better than yours
 
mp3wannabe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Cleveland and Cincinnati
Posts: 370
mp3wannabe is on a distinguished road
just a note on the sizing of the winter tires.....you can use 195/50-16 205/45-16 or 205/50-16 tires and still get a accurate speed reading. the 205/45 will give you slightly high readings (when you are going 100 it will read 102) and the 205/50 will give you slightly low readings (100mph will show 98) tirerack has the pirelli's in 205/45 for 120 a piece
mp3wannabe is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
bztony
Mazda3/Mazdaspeed3
9
December-10th-2007 12:23 PM
WidowMaker
Wheel/Tires
12
December-14th-2003 11:19 PM
nai8o5
3rd Gen Protege/MazdaSpeed/P5/MP3
3
November-26th-2003 11:48 AM
90210brandon
Wheel/Tires
25
October-22nd-2002 05:07 PM
ZiO
West Canada
0
September-29th-2002 03:33 PM

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 


Quick Reply: Winter Tires



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:51 AM.