New All Season Tires

9
Jul
2009

Tires are amazing things.  They are the most direct conduit between the car and the world.  They are the link between potential and realized acceleration.  They apply the horsepower to the earth and grab the ground just as hard to stop us from landing in ditches.  Good tires maximize the performance of a car and bad ones can make a Ferrari handle like a Fujian.

We here at TeamD are big believers in quality tires.  Our "official" tire for winter is the Nokian Hakkapeliitta (seen in many different flavors, mostly studded) and on the summer rallies you will see our cars shod with competition gravel tires by Michelin, Silverstone, etc.

The rest of the year, I tend toward an All Season tire.  I don’t want to run the studded snow tires any more than I need to and with the variable Seattle weather a dedicated summer tire can seem like folly at times.

After the extremely disapointing stock tires died under mysterious circumstances (a Leatherman blade was found embedded in the sidewall) I replaced them first with what was available at the scene of the crime (Michelin MXV4’s I think) and then with a new set of Michelin Pilot Sport AS tires.

While I liked the grippyness of the tire and they did fine in the wet, I was never impressed with their straight-line tracking or their road noise, both of which have gotten worse over time.  When I pulled them off to make room for the winter tires before Totem, I noticed significant “chunking” on the edges (I define chunking as bits of the rubber falling off or threatening to fall off in chunks).  Although the tread was still intact the shallower features were almost worn flat.  It was time to consider retiring them for new rubber.

So began the research.  I consulted others, around Aberdeen just this last weekend, where bizarre weather ruled the weekend and I was wishing I had waited one more week to change out of the studs.

Still, the new tires are nice and quiet, did a great job on both the snow and the gravel (I was working finish HAM but I was able to drive the course out to my position and give the tires a workout),

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