Tire Question

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Bob, Oct 17, 2010.

  1. Bob

    Bob Guest

    Hello,

    Anyone have any opinions regarding the Nokian WR G2 vs the Michelin
    Harmony all-weather tires ?

    Live in New England, so snow/ice capability is important.

    Willing to live with the (only) 50K thread life/warr. on the Nokians, if
    they
    are "truly" better in snow and ice, and still decent for summer driving ?

    Thanks,
    B.
     
    Bob, Oct 17, 2010
    #1
  2. Bob

    Brian Smith Guest

    I use Harmony tires on my accord for summer and X-Ice2 for winter
    driving here in Nova Scotia. I know our winters aren't as bad as what
    you have in New England, but the X-Ice2 tires are great in snow and
    freezing rain at highway speeds and around town, as long as the idiots
    that are too stupid to put winter tires on their vehicles are not in the
    way.
     
    Brian Smith, Oct 17, 2010
    #2
  3. If you drive at "highway speeds" in "snow and a freezing rain" only a
    fool would intentionally be in your way, or anywhere near you.
     
    Barney Oldfield, Oct 17, 2010
    #3
  4. Bob

    Brian Smith Guest

    That's true, fools often drive around forty to fifty kilometres an hour
    in one hundred and ten kilometre an hour zones in rain, snow and
    freezing rain, when there is no reason to be such a hazard.
     
    Brian Smith, Oct 17, 2010
    #4
  5. Bob

    jim beam Guest

    i used to think and drive like you. then i bought a set of dunlop sp
    sports, and suddenly, i was in a world of quite stupendously bad wet
    weather tires - hydroplaning so bad that, yes, you had to creep along at
    less than 50 when it rained. [fab dry weather tires btw, but oh, so bad
    in the wet, it was just a nightmare.]

    moral of the story - i've gone back to michelins and my old driving
    habits, but now i understand why others don't drive like me - they don't
    have decent rubber.
     
    jim beam, Oct 18, 2010
    #5
  6. Bob

    M.A. Stewart Guest


    What's missing from this string is two words... 'road salt'.

    In eastern Canada a lot of road salt is laid down on the roads
    all winter... it is virtually always there... it is embedded into the
    pores of the road surface. That road salt doesn't get washed/flushed
    away until the rains of the spring and summer. This is why people
    can sometimes manage highway speeds during inclement winter
    weather. The road crews are usually always on top winter road
    maintenance (plowing and laying down a lot of salt). Depending on
    regional preferences and actual conditions, sand, crushed stone,
    stone dust, etc., could also be included with the salt.

    When winter first hits (and that usually means it is staying for 4 or
    5 months), the first snow event produces a huge rash of collisions. The
    media blames it on "people have forgotten how to drive in the winter".
    This is only partially the reason. What is actually happening, is the
    road is more slippery, because there is no salt on the road! They are
    driving like they did in the middle of the previous winter. Sometimes
    if there is a big thaw (in the middle of the winter) with enough rain
    to wash the salt off (and out of) the road, the same phenomenon
    (huge rash of collisions) happens when 'Winter Returns'.
     
    M.A. Stewart, Oct 18, 2010
    #6
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