It's that time of year again=winter tire opinion
#1
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It's that time of year again=winter tire opinion
OK, I am thinking of using my garage queen C4S this winter unless there is a lot of snow on the ground or in the forecast. I have a Suburban that has remote start that I rarely need to activate 4x4 since it is so damn good. For you winter experts....should I look at all season or go for winter tires? Keep in mind I have two sets of wheels.
TIA!!
Steve
TIA!!
Steve
#2
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Greetings from Minnesota! First flakes yesterday, but no accumulation. Winter setup goes on next weekend because of the temp. . . . I did not see a lot of choices available for my 2003 C4S, with winter setup from TireRack. I read a bunch of reviews and went with Blizzaks. Let's compare notes next spring.
#3
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Hey, I was in Minneapolis 8/1-8/3=bad week for MN! My roots are from Duluth. It looks like you have to go a little narrower in the winter for good reasons. I was on TR as well and have heard good things about blizzaks. I guess I am buying these to relieve the MSPCs and insure myself if I get caught in light snow?
#5
Three Wheelin'
Go with winters and swap. They are a lot better than allseasons in the winter and then you get the benefit of great tires perfectly suited year round. Indeed, if you can find some wheel takeoffs, it'll be easy to swap each year. It's what I do. But, the winter wheels aren't going on for another month or until the temp gets below freezing for a week.
#6
I had kumho all seasons on last winter, only because that is what was on the car when I purchased it. Seemed to be fine, actually drove better than my SUV. We only had one or two days with big snow last year - one was new years eve and just left it in the garage on heavy snow days. Minnesota also.
Very fun in light snow (under 6 inches). C4 also.
Very fun in light snow (under 6 inches). C4 also.
#7
OK, I am thinking of using my garage queen C4S this winter unless there is a lot of snow on the ground or in the forecast. I have a Suburban that has remote start that I rarely need to activate 4x4 since it is so damn good. For you winter experts....should I look at all season or go for winter tires? Keep in mind I have two sets of wheels.
TIA!!
Steve
TIA!!
Steve
But, for the winter, I use Pilot Sport A/S. They work great for our harsh Texas snow days
-td
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#8
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Yeah, all two of them . . .
#10
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I did a rennlist search for winter tires, and Pirelli came up over and over. I feel more comfortable listening to actual 911 owners, as opposed to TR, which has Hondas, BMWS, etc, etc.
#13
Rennlist Member
Last winter I went with Pirelli Snowsports 240 N-rated (Porsche approved) winter tires on OEM turbo twist wheels; bought the second set used off the PCA classifieds. Fronts are 235/40/18, rear are 295/35/18. Slightly higher sidewalls than the summer tires and the ride is a bit softer, but it works great in the white stuff and absolutely no issues with ABS and PSM. Car handles better in the wet, ice, slush, etc... than any SUV I've ever driven.
Swapping to the winter set-up next week.
Swapping to the winter set-up next week.
#14
Last winter I went with Pirelli Snowsports 240 N-rated (Porsche approved) winter tires on OEM turbo twist wheels; bought the second set used off the PCA classifieds. Fronts are 235/40/18, rear are 295/35/18. Slightly higher sidewalls than the summer tires and the ride is a bit softer, but it works great in the white stuff and absolutely no issues with ABS and PSM. Car handles better in the wet, ice, slush, etc... than any SUV I've ever driven.
Swapping to the winter set-up next week.
Swapping to the winter set-up next week.
#15
Rennlist Member
Rust is not a worry since these cars are well protected. It's more the stone chips from the salt that can be damaging. So I'll stay off the highways and stick to slower roads when they are actively salting.
I hate having a dirt car so I religiously power wash it at one of those coin-ops at least once a week and really blast away at the undercarriage. I also take it to Deny's car wash on Mavis south of Central in Mississauga and have them wash it...it's a no touch system but more importantly, the wheel track is wide enough and coated to handle my 11" rear wheels with no damage. My biggest worry is when it's really deep because the car is so low. The couple of times that it was ugly out there, I just worked from home those days...benefit of being self-employed!
I hate having a dirt car so I religiously power wash it at one of those coin-ops at least once a week and really blast away at the undercarriage. I also take it to Deny's car wash on Mavis south of Central in Mississauga and have them wash it...it's a no touch system but more importantly, the wheel track is wide enough and coated to handle my 11" rear wheels with no damage. My biggest worry is when it's really deep because the car is so low. The couple of times that it was ugly out there, I just worked from home those days...benefit of being self-employed!