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Winter Tires... Why???
I see that a lot of you put on different tires for the winter season. When I was living in NJ I had Toyo Proxes on my Expedition. They were 285mm wide and I had no problem driving in the snow with them.
Would love some input into why change over to winter tires. Is it that the Michelins are terrible in the snow??? Are the winter tires that much better??? I really had no problem driving with the Toyo's..... Thanks! |
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Better to be safe than sorry. |
I go to VT to ski and even if it saves me once a year from getting stuck or whatever, it is worth it to me. All of my cars that are driven in the winter get snows, they really make a huge difference when the time comes.
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1) It's worth it because if I drove around in the X3 in the snow with summer or even all seasons, I'd be going around corners at 0.5mph and braking half a mile in advance just so I wouldn't lose control. Sure, you need to slow down no matter what in bad weather, but winter tires provide extra confidence.
I unexpectedly lost control and spun out completely a year ago making a normal right turn with just a small bit of slush at a normal speed, not intentionally trying to do anything silly, DSC on. If you think doing a 180 in the middle of an intersection is "acceptable", then by all means stay with summers. 2) The cost of a fender bender or repair is FAR more than a set of winter tires. 3) I have a front-drive Lexus with summer tires on year round. Getting moving in snow/ice is difficult, turning is harder, and stopping is impossible. ABS kicks in and you keep flying forwards past the stop sign with no reduction in speed at all. Needless to say, it stays garaged when frozen precip falls. |
When we did our first four winters, back on the Mtn in NC, there
were times early/late in season that we would "try" the run up or down, with oem Micheys on 18s. It was a decided white knuckle trip that was only successful due to the knowledge of our 4 mile road, luck and willingness to "slud" the car around. With the usual switch to our "winter set" of 17" wheels and dedicated Mich Alpins, we were in control, and made it down & back up nearly effortlessly, even on days when neighbors with other 4WD vehicles didn't even try. It was literally night & day for us in our local conditions, with the snow set vs. the "all weather" summer set. All academic, as we are here in sunny SW FLA for the winters, now. |
Winter Tires + X-drive = SUPERIOR Grip.
That is why. |
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Hey.. thank you guys for sheding some light on this for me!!!
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Because my X5 got stuck in 1'5" feet of snow with stock tires.
But to be fair.. the snow was compacted on top of each other so it was hard as hell. Mixed with a lot of ice too. I also didn't gun it up the hill to go to the main road because the snow/ice was so high I was afraid that if I gunned it I would ruin my bumper. So I approached it at like 5mph. Got stuck and had to shovel my way out. Driving in regular snow (I only tested it on 4-5") was funn. |
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