Need some help choosing the best tyres

Need some help choosing the best tyres

Author
Discussion

GMac1

Original Poster:

199 posts

41 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
I've just purchased a Mercedes V220d and it has brand new Kormoran winter tyres fitted. 245/40/18 100.
I obviously need to change them soon and now looking for the best tyres available. Looking at reviews, it seems Michelin crossclimate 2 are the highest rated?
Should I put on summer tyres and switch back in winter or buy all season?
I want to be transporting passengers in comfort at cruising speeds and would prefer the quietest tyres possible.
Any advice?

Thanks

GreenV8S

30,204 posts

284 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
GMac1 said:
Should I put on summer tyres and switch back in winter
Unless you live above the snow line, that's a pointless expense.

Pica-Pica

13,803 posts

84 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
Goodyear then:
EfficientGrip for summer tyres (I use them all year round in NW Wales), or
Vector 4 seasons, if you need that.

GMac1

Original Poster:

199 posts

41 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
Should have said I live in central Scotland. I'd rather just have all year round tyres and keep the snow tyres just as back up.

InitialDave

11,912 posts

119 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
My dad just put Goodyear Vectors on his car, and found them noticeably quieter than the previous tyres he had (afraid I've not got any detail on what they were, though).

Whereas I have CrossClimate 2s on one of my cars, and don't find them intrusive.

I think watching some videos from TyreReviews on YouTube would be worthwhile, Jon provides a lot of useful detail and commentary on his tests.

loskie

5,230 posts

120 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
just use the winter tyres till they wear out, rotating them to wear all 4 out. Then replace with all season tyres.

MustangGT

11,638 posts

280 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
loskie said:
just use the winter tyres till they wear out, rotating them to wear all 4 out. Then replace with all season tyres.
This.

stevieturbo

17,267 posts

247 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
GMac1 said:
Should have said I live in central Scotland. I'd rather just have all year round tyres and keep the snow tyres just as back up.
Just do CC2 or equivalent then

Haltamer

2,455 posts

80 months

Thursday 28th March
quotequote all
Allseasons are my default choice for day to day cars even living in London.

They're designed for touring, with far less bias on performance, hence the quieter and softer ride (At the sacrifice of a little handling)

CC2's are decent but didn't run them long - Mum was driving and bumped a kerb (Quite gently?) and the sidewall was destroyed on one.

Goodyear vector 4's that replaced them are sharper and a bit more fun to drive, excellent all rounder.

My go to, though, is the Vredestein Quatrac Pro. (Newer "Quatrac Pro Plus" version now available)

They're suprisingly cheap, and whilst they don't rank as highly "Overall" in tests, they score the best in the Wet - Cold and wet making up the majority of British Winters - And not far off the other all seasons in other areas.

They tend to not score as highly in snow performance, but when you compare them to a summer baseline, you realise they're still massively ahead - And in my own use, I've never had an issue on snow or very sloshy mud.

Very quiet, comfortable, a little light on steering but quite a nice balanced handler all round - They last well too!

tr7v8

7,192 posts

228 months

Thursday 28th March
quotequote all
Haltamer said:
Allseasons are my default choice for day to day cars even living in London.

They're designed for touring, with far less bias on performance, hence the quieter and softer ride (At the sacrifice of a little handling)

CC2's are decent but didn't run them long - Mum was driving and bumped a kerb (Quite gently?) and the sidewall was destroyed on one.

Goodyear vector 4's that replaced them are sharper and a bit more fun to drive, excellent all rounder.

My go to, though, is the Vredestein Quatrac Pro. (Newer "Quatrac Pro Plus" version now available)

They're suprisingly cheap, and whilst they don't rank as highly "Overall" in tests, they score the best in the Wet - Cold and wet making up the majority of British Winters - And not far off the other all seasons in other areas.

They tend to not score as highly in snow performance, but when you compare them to a summer baseline, you realise they're still massively ahead - And in my own use, I've never had an issue on snow or very sloshy mud.

Very quiet, comfortable, a little light on steering but quite a nice balanced handler all round - They last well too!
These I run them on my Outlander PHEV Very impressed decent grip & low wear. And quiet.