New cars, Winter tyres and Consumer Law !

New cars, Winter tyres and Consumer Law !

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Discussion

drdel

Original Poster:

430 posts

128 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
Every year we have the discussion about the wisdom of fitting winter tyres because both car and tyre manufacturers say 'summer' tyre are poor in cold weather e.g. below 7degrees C.

Consumer Law says a car bought from a dealer must be fit for purpose which I suggest means driveable ALL year. In the UK the temperature is below 7 for about 40% of the time: say half of the year for the sake of argument.

So if you buy a new car in the Autumn, Winter and early Spring should it come fitted with All-weather tyres because otherwise for almost 50% of the year you are not (it could be argued) following the manufacturer's recommendation !!

In my experience most new cars I have bought come fitted with so-called summer tyres and then they pester me to buy their 'winter' tyre sets!!

I wonder if our legal eagles have a view on how the new regs that came on-stream from the 1st October might affect the definition of 'fit-for-purpose'?

HustleRussell

24,690 posts

160 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
I bloody hope not, that'd cost car dealers a fortune and guess who they're going to pass the cost onto?

ETA: oh, and this would certainly result in all used cars being fitted with the cheapest nastiest budget winter tyres which are really the worst of all worlds.

JustinP1

13,330 posts

230 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
drdel said:
Every year we have the discussion about the wisdom of fitting winter tyres because both car and tyre manufacturers say 'summer' tyre are poor in cold weather e.g. below 7degrees C.
In actuality the slant is quite different.

In general, winter tyres start to perform better than summer tyres at about 7 degrees. At 7 there's not much different.

The problem is, any warmer than 7 the performance of a winter tyre is worse than a summer tyre. Stopping distance, in the wet, they wear faster, and are less fuel economical.


Vaud

50,465 posts

155 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
The car still drives. The tyres don't stop being tyres in cold weather.

Extra diligence may be needed by the driver in slippery conditions. As ever.

Nothing to see here, move on.

Riley Blue

20,953 posts

226 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
In 40 years of driving dozens and dozens of different cars I've never found summer tyres to be poor in cold weather. Why, because I drive to the conditions, just as I would if I had winter tyres fitted.

OP - on your new cars which didn't have summer tyres fitted, did you put some on?

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
Riley Blue said:
In 40 years of driving dozens and dozens of different cars I've never found summer tyres to be poor in cold weather.
The interminable winter-tyre-or-not debate is that way --->

ralphrj

3,523 posts

191 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
drdel said:
In the UK the temperature is below 7 for about 40% of the time: say half of the year for the sake of argument.
I would be very surprised if that were true.

Riley Blue

20,953 posts

226 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
Riley Blue said:
In 40 years of driving dozens and dozens of different cars I've never found summer tyres to be poor in cold weather.
The interminable winter-tyre-or-not debate is that way --->
Thank you, I am capable of finding my own way there, should I wish to.

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
Riley Blue said:
TooMany2cvs said:
Riley Blue said:
In 40 years of driving dozens and dozens of different cars I've never found summer tyres to be poor in cold weather.
The interminable winter-tyre-or-not debate is that way --->
Thank you, I am capable of finding my own way there, should I wish to.
If you don't want to, then that's even less of a reason to bring it here.

Mojooo

12,720 posts

180 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
drdel said:
I wonder if our legal eagles have a view on how the new regs that came on-stream from the 1st October might affect the definition of 'fit-for-purpose'?
The definition is exactly the same - so i doubt it.

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
If you buy a new car in a country which legally requires winter tyres, I wonder what it comes shod with, and whether there's a second set in the boot...?

drdel

Original Poster:

430 posts

128 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
HustleRussell said:
I bloody hope not, that'd cost car dealers a fortune and guess who they're going to pass the cost onto?

ETA: oh, and this would certainly result in all used cars being fitted with the cheapest nastiest budget winter tyres which are really the worst of all worlds.
Not true = all they would need to do is fit 'All-season' tyres.

The so-called 'summer' tyres are usually fitted because they give the best 'test' performance for journalists and most markets.

LoonR1

26,988 posts

177 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
We don't have summer tyres in the UK, we have all year tyres. Some may choose to fit more appropriate tyres in winter, but few of us fit specialist Michelin Cups or slicks in summer (legality aside)

I have true summer tyres on my road bike. They have virtually no tread when new, don't work unless warm and don't last very long either.

The question' pretty daft IMO and has been pointed out above, if dealers were compelled to provide two full sets of new tyres with every car, then the purchaser would be paying for them. It would also then be compulsory for us all to have two sets of tyres. There is little need for winter tyres to be made compulsory IMO

ging84

8,896 posts

146 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
There is no such thing as a summer tyre
they are just tyres

a car on ordinary tyres is capable of making progress safely on over 99% of UK roads over 99% of the time
how are they not fit for purpose?


havoc

30,059 posts

235 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
ralphrj said:
drdel said:
In the UK the temperature is below 7 for about 40% of the time: say half of the year for the sake of argument.
I would be very surprised if that were true.
Precisely this.

Unless you live in Scotland, in which case you're on your own, let's make a few assumptions.

"Normal" driving is between the hours of 6am and 12am.
Typically in the UK, you don't see 7 Celsius or less in this period outside of late-Nov, Dec, Jan and Feb. So you're already restricting yourself to 3.5/12 months, = 29%.
Then consider that for maybe half of these days it'll never drop that low = 15% left.
Next, consider that even when it does, it won't always be that cold in the middle of the day (i.e. lunch/afternoon), so you can probably knock another 1/4 off = 12% left.

So, even by optimistics maths, it only drops below 7 Celsius for 12% of the time.

Finally, let's consider when winter tyres really show an improvement, i.e. on snow and ice. Which more than halves the above figure - both are rare things in the UK. So even being generous, we're at a figure where winter tyres are truly required for ~6% of the time. So let's use a window of 5-10%, to account for variations across the UK.

Does it really make sense then?!?

(BTW, I have winter tyres and I'm looking for a new set for the wife's car. But for many people they're not necessary, so I don't see we need to legislate for them, at least not in England...)

Variomatic

2,392 posts

161 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
Riley Blue said:
In 40 years of driving dozens and dozens of different cars I've never found summer tyres to be poor in cold weather.
The interminable winter-tyre-or-not debate is that way --->
The thing is, even without "bringing the debate here" Riley is right.Standard tyres are not only legal all year in this country, the (large) majority of drivers use them all year without suffering any of the problems that winter tyre proponents seem to think are inevitable.

Given the 10s of millions of cars in the country, if that wasn't true then no-one would be able to move from October to march for all the wrecks piled 3-deep everywhere.

Since we're not 3-deep in wrecks as soon as the nights close in, a car sold with normal tyres clearly isfit for purpose even in winter.

ModernAndy

2,094 posts

135 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
LoonR1 said:
We don't have summer tyres in the UK, we have all year tyres. Some may choose to fit more appropriate tyres in winter, but few of us fit specialist Michelin Cups or slicks in summer (legality aside)

I have true summer tyres on my road bike. They have virtually no tread when new, don't work unless warm and don't last very long either.

The question' pretty daft IMO and has been pointed out above, if dealers were compelled to provide two full sets of new tyres with every car, then the purchaser would be paying for them. It would also then be compulsory for us all to have two sets of tyres. There is little need for winter tyres to be made compulsory IMO
That and the fact that generally speaking you get a decent brand fitted to a brand new car anyway.

To the OP:
Winter tyres aren't snow tyres so the comparison you really should be making is on cold wet roads rather than being able to pull away when there's a bit of snow. Winter tyres are undoubtedly safer when the temperature is a few degrees or less but you can still drive on regular tyres albeit with a bit of added caution. Ultimately, the tyre choice is with the driver not the law in this country.

I would imagine in places with winter tyre laws like Germany you would get either a summer or winter tyre fitted depending on the handover date.

ModernAndy

2,094 posts

135 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
havoc said:
Precisely this.

Unless you live in Scotland, in which case you're on your own, let's make a few assumptions.

"Normal" driving is between the hours of 6am and 12am.
Typically in the UK, you don't see 7 Celsius or less in this period outside of late-Nov, Dec, Jan and Feb. So you're already restricting yourself to 3.5/12 months, = 29%.
Then consider that for maybe half of these days it'll never drop that low = 15% left.
Next, consider that even when it does, it won't always be that cold in the middle of the day (i.e. lunch/afternoon), so you can probably knock another 1/4 off = 12% left.

So, even by optimistics maths, it only drops below 7 Celsius for 12% of the time.

Finally, let's consider when winter tyres really show an improvement, i.e. on snow and ice. Which more than halves the above figure - both are rare things in the UK. So even being generous, we're at a figure where winter tyres are truly required for ~6% of the time. So let's use a window of 5-10%, to account for variations across the UK.

Does it really make sense then?!?

(BTW, I have winter tyres and I'm looking for a new set for the wife's car. But for many people they're not necessary, so I don't see we need to legislate for them, at least not in England...)
I am from Scotland and would say that while it depends how bad the winter is, it is usual for temperatures to be around 7 degrees or less for most of the day from now till March. I certainly get the use out of my set and would say that due to the generally wet conditions as well as the frost and cold, they're better at least 80% of driving time. I'm not sure I'd be too worried about fitting winter tyres in somewhere like Devon though.

creampuff

6,511 posts

143 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
Riley Blue said:
In 40 years of driving dozens and dozens of different cars I've never found summer tyres to be poor in cold weather. Why, because I drive to the conditions, just as I would if I had winter tyres fitted.

OP - on your new cars which didn't have summer tyres fitted, did you put some on?
Interesting POV. I've been unable to make it up about a 1 in 500 hill with summer tyres on and a road with snow and perhaps some ice. Are your summer tyres magic?

LoonR1

26,988 posts

177 months

Sunday 22nd November 2015
quotequote all
No tyre is going to work on ice, unless it's studded and those tyres are illegal.