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Had some before, extremely noisy tyres. I go on noise/comfort then safety when choosing tyres, efficiency doesn't really come in to it. Where did you get hem from by the way?goodyear
Had some before, extremely noisy tyres. I go on noise/comfort then safety when choosing tyres, efficiency doesn't really come in to it. Where did you get hem from by the way?goodyear
I'll get my misses to take you out for a drive in our one... iI keep threatening to take her to the santa pod drag strip the way she drives itI've never once seen a Tesla driven anything like quick, they're predominantly driven by crap drivers who enjoy the Kudos of a quick car yet don't mind lining the pocket of one the most evil men in history.
Graveyards are full of folk that said that.
I recently paid £427 for a pair of Bridgestones for the missus car. Ouch.I'll get my misses to take you out for a drive in our one... iI keep threatening to take her to the santa pod drag strip the way she drives it
4 x Michelin Pilot Sport 4s were £800 our Model 3.
I always pay for decent gear, when the missus is ferrying the family around.40 years of driving with cheap tyres....
Never had an issue. Plenty of people in graveyards who drove dangerously in very expensive cars with very expensive tyres!!
Same thing, no?And it's actually a Fiat, not Peugeot.
I always pay for decent gear, when the missus is ferrying the family around.
The lads' first car came to us with Landsail tyres. They promptly got swapped for 5 x Weather Control A005s. The difference in handling was absolutely phenomenal.All comes down to the people behind the wheel driving road worthy vehicles. Its nothing about how much things cost.
Blimey! What car is it?I recently paid £427 for a pair of Bridgestones for the missus car. Ouch.
Try looking at it a different way. Same driver, same car. Extreme weather conditions or emergency braking/steering. That car with premium tyres (which will likely cost more) will react/perform better in the same situation than the car would with budget (cheaper/non branded/remoulded) tyres.All comes down to the people behind the wheel driving road worthy vehicles. Its nothing about how much things cost.
A driver can need to do an emergency stop or take evasive action even on the shortest of journeys.Agree with above. But in fairness some cars and drivers only go supermarket and home. They probably don't justify the best, dearest tyres.
There are top of range tyres, good tyres ( well-known makes have second brands, e.g Avon, cooper). Such midrange are a sensible option for shopping trolleys and for midrange cars on a tight budget.
Then there are the cheap ditchfinders. These should be avoided. Even on a normal wet road you can tell the difference (or should be able to)
I'm not saying every car should have the ultimate best tyre. But it should have good tyres.
My other bugbear is "top range cars" that have top quality brands fitted, but no tread left. Better to have a sensible tyre with good tread than a top tyre with none. A lot of people might be surprised how many prestige cars run around on worn out tyres.