Jestersix

Snow Tires question.

Yeah. Read up that M+S qualifies. But with el nina this year, thinking extra precaution with true snow tires would be a good thing now...

Except that would mean 4 alloys snd 4 dnow tires. Ka ching!
How much would you pay to not wreck your car? And you can buy used/sell when you are done.
 
Thoughts:

1) Snow tires are for people that LIVE in the snow region.
If you are just going skiing, you would might put on chains 1 out of every 10 times, and usually just for the pass.
If you are seriously off the beaten path, you must have chains regardless.

2) Build a set of chain install blocks.
Basically, a board, with 2 blocks on it about 1" apart, that you drive on, and the chain is loose in the slot between the blocks.
This makes installing chains like 10X easier, because you can move it all around as you connect it.

3) Spikes spider chains (google it)
Never used them myself, but I hear great things. Takes less than a minute to install/remove.
 
other thought I have... Nokkian WR G4 ties... rated 3PMSF. all weather.

less stellar summer performance but solid winters... so a balanced option
 
Spamming here again -- did some more research and thinking...

For folks living in the Bay Area and commuting to Tahoe, it might not be the best option to throw dedicated winter tires on locally and the drive up. The rubber on most winter tires are best for 40F and below. Above this, it gets softer which may impact your maneuvering and a braking between here to outside of Tahoe. Grabbing a 3PMSF rated tires might be the better choice after all.

That said, I'll probably still get a second set of wheels with 3PMSF tires mounted for swapping in so that I can run my summer / all-seasons locally for better day to day driving and handling... and then the all seasons for Tahoe. a bit of an over kill since it's seasons vs all-weather, I know... :)
 
Spamming here again -- did some more research and thinking...

For folks living in the Bay Area and commuting to Tahoe, it might not be the best option to throw dedicated winter tires on locally and the drive up. The rubber on most winter tires are best for 40F and below. Above this, it gets softer which may impact your maneuvering and a braking between here to outside of Tahoe. Grabbing a 3PMSF rated tires might be the better choice after all.
The softer rubber does make the tire wear faster, so I have them for the day I drive up, then take them off when I get back home. This article from edmunds says that snow tires from 20 years ago didn't perform well (failed after one emergency stop) in the dry conditions, but modern snow tires work great in the dry. The bridgestone article agrees that wear is the predominant concern for running snow tires year round. I have found some sources that say wet braking is worse with winter tires than with all seasons but the opposite is true for snow, so the question could come down do how much snow do you expect vs how much rain. I agree most storms bring lots of rain, but I would bet that per mile of road, snowy roads produce a significantly higher rate of accidents than wet.

When I leave for Tahoe in the early am, it is often colder than 40F so the mushy rubber is less concern for me in the "warm" parts of the drive. I have pushed my vehicle quite a bit in the dry with my snow tires and my experience matches up that overall performance isn't as good on dry pavement as my fancy summer tires, but the winter tires are safe and effective on dry pavement, and significantly safer on snow. If I had to put a number to it, I would say my braking in my Blizzaks is 85% as good as with my Pilot Sport 4S tires in similar (40ish F) weather, keeping in mind I run a performance summer tire in the PS4S.

Love the discussion! This is making me learn more about tire types I had only previously done small amounts of research into.





And this is what all of us should aspire our winter driving to look like :)

 
The softer rubber does make the tire wear faster, so I have them for the day I drive up, then take them off when I get back home. This article from edmunds says that snow tires from 20 years ago didn't perform well (failed after one emergency stop) in the dry conditions, but modern snow tires work great in the dry. The bridgestone article agrees that wear is the predominant concern for running snow tires year round. I have found some sources that say wet braking is worse with winter tires than with all seasons but the opposite is true for snow, so the question could come down do how much snow do you expect vs how much rain. I agree most storms bring lots of rain, but I would bet that per mile of road, snowy roads produce a significantly higher rate of accidents than wet.

When I leave for Tahoe in the early am, it is often colder than 40F so the mushy rubber is less concern for me in the "warm" parts of the drive. I have pushed my vehicle quite a bit in the dry with my snow tires and my experience matches up that overall performance isn't as good on dry pavement as my fancy summer tires, but the winter tires are safe and effective on dry pavement, and significantly safer on snow. If I had to put a number to it, I would say my braking in my Blizzaks is 85% as good as with my Pilot Sport 4S tires in similar (40ish F) weather, keeping in mind I run a performance summer tire in the PS4S.

Love the discussion! This is making me learn more about tire types I had only previously done small amounts of research into.





And this is what all of us should aspire our winter driving to look like :)

Yeah -- this definitely had me doing more research. I need to find a link to motor trend or CR that ran various tests to share.

Good to know your first hand experience... The blizzaks were high on my list... but now also thinking about the Nokkian WR G4s...
 
@H2OPlayar here's the comparison. Bit dated but most of these tires are still current...

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And btw, thanks a lot... all this shop talk got me into getting "essentials " for getting my car snow ready... just a bit of a shopping spree. 3 ton jack not in pic... and picking up a ryobi high torque impact wrench tomorrow. Lol.

Decided probably time to do a full maintenance/ tune-up. On top of getting a set of snow wheels...

20211107_175529.jpg
 
Alrighty. Finally pulled the trigger in a full set of wheels and snow tires. Went with Nokian Hakkapeliitta R3 SUVs... has great snow and ice handling from tests and reviews plus good dry handling.

Nokian-Hakkapeliitta-R3-SUV-test-4.jpg
 
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