Forum search & shortcuts

A 'what car tyre' q...
 

A 'what car tyre' question, with a twist!

Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 
[#12667362]

So a bit of context:

My nan had to give up her car recently, she's currenty in hospital with a reasonable prognosis considering shes 94yo.
She's obviously hung up the car keys and essentially given her car to me, as i'm already on the insurance.

The problem is the tyres, they are pretty much brand new, but branded 'matador' something or other, and they are an absolute liability. I'm sure they are technically legal but I've never driven on such a bad tyre, so I'm thinking about getting rid of all four and buying something a bit safer.

The size is 175/60/15... and looking at the handbook, I might have to stick to that size, so I was thinking uniroyal rain-expert, but they are £100 each, which seems crazy for a 15".... Im pretty sure I paid aout £75 each for the Uniroyal rain sport 5, in 16" for the volvo a few years ago.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:27 pm
Posts: 46121
Full Member
 

Aye, car tyres have increased in cost again.
£100 a corner isn't a surprise these days - even in 15" flavour.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:37 pm
Posts: 6318
Full Member
 

They are a proper budget job but there's worse.

What's the age stamp on them?

I use uni royal or khumo mainly on mine though devanti which is oaks own brand from memory are very good vfm


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:41 pm
 mboy
Posts: 12651
Free Member
 

Car tyre prices are mostly dictated by how popular that size is now, not when it was fitted... Hence many 18 or 19" tyres are now cheaper than 14 or 15" tyres with a lot less rubber in them! Sad, but true...

Just had a quick look and indeed, you're looking at the best part of £100 a corner fitted for anything decent in that size! Shocking but true...

FWIW, the Matador's aren't the worst by some stretch... B wet rated, and towards the higher end of what's available in that size. Also, you simply won't get many of the premium tyres you might want in that size, simply because the manufacturers won't deem it worthy making them because of a lack of demand.

What car is it? That's a pretty odd size these days... You might even find an upgrade to some alloys from a higher spec model in a larger size will bring with it much cheaper replacement tyres if you were that way inclined...


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:46 pm
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

£100 a corner isn’t a surprise these days – even in 15″ flavour.

TBF though they look to be a pretty uncommon size, fewer than 20 hits on ATF, BC, Halfords Vs well over 100 for the popular 205/55/16 size. What I'd call a decent tyre starts at around £80 for a Hankook or Falken summer.
OP, are you sure that's your only tyre choice available for that run?


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:55 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@mboy, and others, thanks, it's a 1.2L nissan micra, I don't know the power but I imagine it's about 80-90bhp.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:55 pm
 Chew
Posts: 1346
Free Member
 

I’d have a play around with the pressures before swapping them out.

Check what they are at the moment and go from there.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:57 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Really I'm asking as a lot of cars standard alloys can take a slightly fatter or slimmer profile and still be in manufacture spec.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 10:58 pm
Posts: 11647
Free Member
 

You can change the tyre size, safest is to go for a size that is used on another variant of the car. Technically you should tell your insurance. You also need to match or exceed the weight rating, and the speed rating. Below, 195/55r15 looks like a viable alternative, just check you have clearance for an extra 10mm width on the inside of the tyre, and also on the outside before it protrudes from the outermost part of the wing. The percentage is the overall increase in tyre diameter)

Stolen from elsewhere:

175/65 R 15 (+3.0%)
175/55 R 15 (-3.0%)
185/60 R 15 (+2.0%)
195/55 R 15 +0.8%)
195/50 R 15 (-2.5%)
205/55 R 15 (+2.6%)
205/50 R 15 (-0.8%)


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:04 pm
Posts: 4710
Free Member
 

Matador tyres are 100% owned by Continental so nowhere near a cheap ditch-finder. Definitely try changing the tyre pressures first then give them a decent run to scrub them in a bit if the car has sat for a while, tyres that sit for a while after use can get a small film of hard rubber on the surface that wears off in a few miles. Provided the date code on them isn't earlier than 2015 or so they should be perfectly serviceable.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:13 pm
Posts: 6318
Full Member
 

Micra tyres are an odd size. They where conti oe fitment from memory

When I was at Nissan there was only about 3 brands at the time.

We sold loads of firestone as they where 50%of the conti price wise


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:17 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@reluctantjumper

I can assure you that 'matador' tyres are complete shyte.. they shouldn't be road legal. but yet, they are.

EDIT: I'd happily buy conti's or rainsports... but these tyres are a travesty... they are frankly unsafe.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:22 pm
 mboy
Posts: 12651
Free Member
 

it’s a 1.2L nissan micra, I don’t know the power but I imagine it’s about 80-90bhp.

80bhp I believe... And no worries... 👍🏻

Just had a very quick look on ebay, there's plenty of OEM 16" alloys for sale on there with 185 or 195 wide tyres of an appropriately lower profile. A quick google suggests 17's with 205/40's will fit too, albeit will ruin the ride with such a low profile.

Up to you, but if the stock wheels have 175's on as OEM fitment, then they're not likely to take anything wider, especially if they're steelies. I'd suggest at over a ton with such narrow tyres fitted, some of what you're experiencing re lack of grip is to do with the narrow section of the tyre, not just the make.

Personally, if it was me, bearing in mind tyres are my job... I'd just be thankful of some free transport and drive it cautiously for now (road conditions aren't great right now) and be grateful, whilst keeping my eye out for some good priced OEM fitment alloys on ebay with half decent tyres.

I can assure you that ‘matador’ tyres are complete shyte.. they shouldn’t be road legal. but yet, they are.

EDIT: I’d happily buy conti’s or rainsports… but these tyres are a travesty… they are frankly unsafe.

You'll find that, better as either of those tyres are, that in a 175 wide fitment on a car that weighs the wrong side of a ton, they'll be quite underwhelming too...


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:35 pm
Posts: 18220
Full Member
 

It's weird. I've always bought the cheapest so called 'ditch finders' on all of my cars.
Could never really afford the Maxxis of the car world.
Yet Weirdly, I've not yet found myself unintentionally parked in any ditches.

I wonder if there's any specific reason that people do end up in ditches on these apparently dangerous tyres and if there's perhaps any way this could be avoided? 🤔😉


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:40 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

thanks all I might just bang 4x uniroyal rain expert on then, seems I can do that for £400, and it's a much better tyre.


 
Posted : 29/12/2022 11:53 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@kayak23

Well for starters, my 'road legal' matador tyre can accidentally wheelspin on a 1.2 micra, on a dry road. That is how shyte these tyres are.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:02 am
Posts: 2278
Full Member
 

Agree with the others who say it’s a weird tyre size so costs more and less options.

My girlfriend’s 206 uses a slightly different size of 175/65/R14 and there’s loads of premium options under £80 fitted on black circles.

Often a wheel can take a slightly wider / narrower tyre. If you can get specs for the exact wheel size for your car then check online or at a tyre garage to see if you can tweak the width and profile a bit to get a more popular size.

Use the following website to compare tyre sizes and see what alternative sizes are not far off your current diameter and won’t throw off the speedo too much.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:04 am
Posts: 39735
Free Member
 

Up to you, but if the stock wheels have 175’s on as OEM fitment, then they’re not likely to take anything wider, especially if they’re steelies. I’d suggest at over a ton with such narrow tyres fitted, some of what you’re experiencing re lack of grip is to do with the narrow section of the tyre, not just the make.

Something else is at play. I've a 108 on 165/60/r15s and it holds the road just fine on Goodyear vectors. There's really no need to go putting wider tires/bigger wheels on.

With 80 horses Id have to be doing something quite stupid to get it to break traction. Even in the recent snow it's been surefooted and minimal wheel spins


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:10 am
Posts: 17855
Full Member
 

Weird that you are experiencing poor performance with Matador tyres.
As said above they are a budget brand of Continental.

Years ago I had some or on my 1.9 TDi Ibiza (for ref, 130bhp & 310Nm torque) at a tyre place close to where I worked at the time.
They were Hectorra MP44s. The bloke insisted they were better than I would expect and to be fair, they were much better.
Good grip, good life, reasonably quiet, no hit to economy.
I used them for a few years. The model changes and last ones I had on were mp46 I think.

Maybe some of their other tyres are shit, but the ones I've run were fine.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:10 am
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Weird that you are experiencing poor performance with Matador tyres.

Nothing weird, they are just shit bargain basement tyres.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:15 am
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

Weird that you are experiencing poor performance with Matador tyres.
As said above they are a budget brand of Continental.

They'll be made to a lower spec with cheaper materials and less money put into R&D. If they performed like Continentals they'd be sold as Continentals and priced accordingly.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:25 am
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I think I'll just bang 4x uniroyal rains on, seems to be the best bang for buck at 100 each. I just dont't trust the matadors, they are too twitchy and squirmy.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:51 am
Posts: 13292
Free Member
 

wheelspin on a 1.2 micra, on a dry road. That is how shyte these tyres are.

Or your clutch control...


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 1:22 am
Posts: 66122
Full Member
 

stumpy01
Full Member

Weird that you are experiencing poor performance with Matador tyres.
As said above they are a budget brand of Continental.

Continental have a few stealth brands that they sell crap under. Can't remember the one they use for wheel bearings off the top of my head but they're proper crap too, I fell for "they're continental so they'll be good" and then replaced them after about 10000 miles.

As someone else said, if they were good they'd be branded continental- Matador exists so they can sell stuff that would ruin their brand.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 1:28 am
Posts: 3623
Free Member
 

It’s weird. I’ve always bought the cheapest so called ‘ditch finders’ on all of my cars.
Could never really afford the Maxxis of the car world.
Yet Weirdly, I’ve not yet found myself unintentionally parked in any ditches.

Until recently I'd have agreed with you. I've had all sorts of crap on work vehicles and they've been ok. Worn quickly, but ok.
Tyres do go off. I had a set of Bridgestone SO2, I think go off due to aging, they went from ace to terrible. They were pretty old though and no ABS or traction control.

The cheap Sunshine or whatever tyres on the front of our slow elderly Astra, that struggles to get out of its own way, went from acceptable to utterly terrible very quickly and started cracking. They rapidly got replaced.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 2:08 am
 mboy
Posts: 12651
Free Member
 

I think I’ll just bang 4x uniroyal rains on, seems to be the best bang for buck at 100 each.

I just took Uniroyal Rainsport 5's off my MX5 cos they squirmed badly and lacked in feedback... That was in 205/45/17 size. Replaced with the latest Goodyear Eagle F1 Assymetric 6's (which aren't available in your size to be fair), and they made the world of difference!

I've had rainsport 2's and 3's on cars before, been impressed in general, less so with the 5's, in fact really uninspiring tyre.

Toyo CF2's @ a little over £50 apiece delivered (my local friendly tyre fitter will do for £15 a tyre fitted if I supply or all 4 for £50) would be where my money went in that size...


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 2:59 am
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Can’t remember the one they use for wheel bearings

That'll be because tyres have nothing to do with bearings. 😉


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 4:30 am
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@mboy

Replaced with the latest Goodyear Eagle F1 Assymetric 6’s (which aren’t available in your size to be fair), and they made the world of difference

That's half the problem, I can't seem to buy premium tyres in this size unless I go for a michelin ££££


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 4:36 am
Posts: 15555
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@alpin

Or your clutch control…

I've been driving a long time, I know how to drop the clutch, and how to 'make progress' and also how to drive sensibly. This post is purely about how bad the tyre choice is in this particular size, £100 per tyre (for anything half decent), fitting and balancing is ludicrous for a 15"


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 4:42 am
Posts: 10635
Full Member
 

My first experience of Vredestein was similar to yours, OP. They took a few hundred km to really sort themselves out, but they did.

The very cold temperatures might also not be helping with this. Perhaps once the temperature increases and they’ve had some time, they’ll be okay.

I can also support what another poster said above about finding similar, but not identical size tyres. Our Panda 100hp needed 195/45/15 tyres which were £100+ each and only available from Goodyear, but 195/50/15 were £60 each and available from Conti, Dunlop AND Goodyear.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 5:53 am
Posts: 6717
Free Member
 

Wider tyres aren't likely to help either wet or snow performance. Just stick some new tyres on there suited to the majority of your seasonal needs


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 7:42 am
Posts: 6318
Full Member
 

Date codes?

They may be very very old...

Was semprit the other Goodyear brand? Can't remember who made them.

Also checked your tyre pressures?


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 8:18 am
Posts: 7142
Full Member
 

Matador exists so they can sell stuff that would ruin their brand.

seems odd then that the Continental link is one of the first things you see on the Matador website


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 8:24 am
Posts: 4710
Free Member
 

This post is purely about how bad the tyre choice is in this particular size, £100 per tyre (for anything half decent), fitting and balancing is ludicrous for a 15″

That's the price of tyres now! Just put two fronts on my car (Conti's in 195/55/15, a very common size) and they were just under £97 each after a small discount. Inflation and import costs have really hit tyre prices hard.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 8:37 am
Posts: 18593
Free Member
 

If they were good enough for a 94-year old driver surely they're good enough for someone who:

I’ve been driving a long time, I know how to drop the clutch, and how to ‘make progress’ and also how to drive sensibly.

😉

New tyres often feel vague initially, especially if they're old stock so it's worth persisting and using your skills to adapt your driving. If you've been driving a long time just go back to how you used to drive on 145/82 14, or perhaps not, they were fun.

I'd keep them and use the Micra as intended.

If not Michelin Cross Climates. 😉


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 9:50 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

That’s the price of tyres now! Just put two fronts on my car (Conti’s in 195/55/15, a very common size) and they were just under £97 each after a small discount. Inflation and import costs have really hit tyre prices hard.

Prices are all over the place, that's true but if you can look over a couple of weeks you can still find a decent deal. I paid £93 each buying a set of Goodyear Vector G3 in the very common 225/45 r17 about a month ago. They went up a fair bit, now they're £103.99 but with 15% off a set of 4 so about £88!


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 10:12 am
Posts: 11472
Full Member
 

The very cold temperatures might also not be helping with this. Perhaps once the temperature increases and they’ve had some time, they’ll be okay.

+1 for this. I used to run Goodyear Eagle F1s, which were great tyres in mild to warm conditions, but felt horrible at anything under 5˚C or so, I once almost went straight over a deceptive backroad junction when they locked up big time under firm, but not panic, braking in cold conditions.

I'm sure Matadors aren't the best thing out there, but assuming they're a summer tyre, they won't be working remotely well in winter conditions. Can you maybe fit an all season tyre for a similar price to a premium summer option?


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 11:21 am
Posts: 17449
Full Member
 

4 CrossClimates fitted to my wife’s Q2 this morning. Car is coming up 2 yrs old and the OEM Michelin somethings were really poor last winter, so bit the bullet. £580 fitted, with KwikFit offering best local deal. (215/55/17). Originals still had about 4mm front and a bit more on rear, after 14k miles. CrossClimates do seem to last well, my Q5 has done about 24k on a set and still has 4mm plus all round.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 11:27 am
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Have you checked the shocks out to make sure they aren’t knackered? Poor shocks will give horrible traction and be very squirmy and give many of the issues you mentioned. Also have the bushes checked.

Even ditch finders should be fine unless provoked or at the limit in an emergency.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 11:35 am
Posts: 18593
Free Member
 

I once almost went straight over a deceptive backroad junction when they locked up big time under firm, but not panic, braking in cold conditions

The last time I locked up under those conditions was pre ABS, what car is that?


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 11:41 am
Posts: 11472
Full Member
 

The last time I locked up under those conditions was pre ABS, what car is that?

It was a Mk2 Golf GTi, it most certainly did not have ABS 🙂


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 11:56 am
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

at the limit in an emergency

If only we knew when that was going to be...


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 12:08 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

If only we knew when that was going to be…

Exactly, which is why I always fit decent tyres. However, a ditch finder with good tread is arguably better than a worn (but still legal) premium tyre. Whatever the tyre, one needs to drive within its limits. Unfortunately, far too many don’t and then blame the equipment!


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 1:28 pm
 Joe
Posts: 1728
Free Member
 

Shocked at how much tyres for my berlingo with 15 inch wheels were. Wanted another set of michelin climate+ tyrs and they were 125 quid each!!! Even really budget/shit options were coming in at 80-90 quid.


 
Posted : 30/12/2022 1:57 pm
Page 1 / 2