Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Driving long distance with one of four tyres advisory
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Driving long distance with one of four tyres advisory
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ircFree Member
Makes sense to me. If a tyre cost £150 and you get 80% of the wear before changing at 3mm you are avoiding driving for thousands of miles with compromised wet weather performance to save £30 per tyre.
jamesozFull MemberI wonder if a lease company would ok new tyres at that wear level. It’s 20 years ago but I do remember every time I took a leased vehicle in for tyres, the fitter would have to get the ok from the lease company.
singletrackmindFull MemberBest not get into that new fad called mountain biking if driving is the most dangerous thing your family do.
I’ve heard it’s put many people in hospital, some people on multiple occasions2IdleJonFree MemberGot to love a STW car tyre thread. Almost as good as a speeding thread.
I always assume that these threads are the transcripts of conversations that The Detectorists have in the pub when they aren’t talking about metal detectors?
2trail_ratFree MemberMakes sense to me. If a tyre cost £150 and you get 80% of the wear before changing at 3mm you are avoiding driving for thousands of miles with compromised wet weather performance to save £30 per tyre.
depends on your brand – michelin a company with a vested interest in selling you more tires …. and very vocal about how certain tires (one assumes theirs) are nearly as good at minimum wear as many other brands are when new…..
id sooner have a cross climate or a quatrac at 1.6 than an off brand ditch finder at 5mm.
matt_outandaboutFull Memberid sooner have a cross climate or a quatrac at 1.6 than an off brand ditch finder at 5mm.
Agreed.
multi21Free Membertrail_rat
depends on your brand – michelin a company with a vested interest in selling you more tires …. and very vocal about how certain tires (one assumes theirs) are nearly as good at minimum wear as many other brands are when new…..
id sooner have a cross climate or a quatrac at 1.6 than an off brand ditch finder at 5mm
It’s an interesting point. Specifically for wet conditions I would have thought tread depth is still the key thing (to avoid aquaplaning) but I would like to know for sure.
I haven’t seen that tested anywhere.
Though if you can afford good tyres in the first place, getting them changed a little bit early is probably no issue.
trail_ratFree MemberThough if you can afford good tyres in the first place, getting them changed a little bit early is probably no issue.
Well Michelin sell it as an excessive waste of resources.
I had new continental van contacts they were utterly shit on standing water oh and in wet corners – and dry corners for that matter . Infact anything that wasn’t 70mph straight line motorway. They were terrible.
Tread pattern has. A huge part to play down to a point.
ircFree MemberAutobild the German tyre testers ran tests with all seasons at new, 4mm, and 2mm. The Michelin and my tyres Goodyear Vector 4 Season Gen 2, were the best.
“For AutoBild, the conclusion of the test was clear. Only 2 tyres were able to deliver optimum safety when worn: the Michelin CrossClimate + and the Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-2.”
“what was even more striking in this AutoBild test was that the performance of these tyres dropped significantly as soon as the tread depth reached 4mm, particularly in wet and snowy conditions.”
Even then the aquaplaning performance of the Michelin deteriorated.
As I said up thread even my top rated Good years can be felt squirming in puddles at 3mm so I think the case for changing average or bargain tyres at 3mm remains. Especially coming into winter
drnoshFree Member3 tyres OK.
1 an advisory.
Got a good spare?
You know what to do.
OnzadogFree Member“I wonder if a lease company would ok new tyres at that wear level. It’s 20 years ago but I do remember every time I took a leased vehicle in for tyres, the fitter would have to get the ok from the lease company.”
My thoughts exactly. Last two jobs with company cars would have laughed me out of the tyre shop if I’d tried getting new tyres at 2.7mm.
jimwFree MemberLast two jobs with company cars would have laughed me out of the tyre shop if I’d tried getting new tyres at 2.7mm.
To be honest I can’t see what relevance a lease company’ s opinion would have on a debate on whether it is sensible to change tyres at 3mm? Their only interest is likely to be saving money not safety.
My nephew was told to carry on driving on tyres which were down to the cords on the inside edges by his lease company as the vehicle was going to be returned in a couple of months time. He refused and they eventually gave in and paid. This was in May of this year
1jamesozFull Member“ To be honest I can’t see what relevance a lease company’ s opinion would have on a debate on whether it is sensible to change tyres at 3mm? Their only interest is likely to be saving money not safety”
So if you payed the BIC Tax for a fully funded lease vehicle, would you put your hand in your own pocket to change tyres at 3mm to do business miles? I think I already know most peoples answer.
Obviously unsafe tyres you have as an example need to be changed and the lease company need a kick up the arse.
1theotherjonvFree MemberBest not get into that new fad called mountain biking if driving is the most dangerous thing your family do.
I know the participation numbers are different but about 80 families will be getting a phone call or a knock on the door today to tell them a loved one has been either killed or seriously injured in a road collision.
30,000 a year. 136,000 all severity injuries.
I think for most of us, particularly those that drive regularly, that statement is not a bad one to work to every time you get behind the wheel. And given the tyres are the only contact for braking and cornering, not one I’m comfortable ‘saving’ a few quid on.
trail_ratFree MemberFor AutoBild, the conclusion of the test was clear. Only 2 tyres were able to deliver optimum safety when worn: the Michelin CrossClimate + and the Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-2.”
“what was even more striking in this AutoBild test was that the performance of these tyres dropped significantly as soon as the tread depth reached 4mm, particularly in wet and snowy conditions
Interesting extraction and juxtaposition of two quotes from completely separate parts of the linked article to sensationalize a point.
Anyway that’s an asside
How did the summer tires fare at 3mm I wonder.
Fwiw I did say I’d change the tires coming into winter if I was the op. They have about 4 months to go in this hemisphere though.
j4mieFree MemberCan’t believe the amount of absolute guff I just read through here. Oh. my. dear. god.
No wonder garages selling tyres make so much money on gullible people, they’re the same ones telling people their brake pads and discs need changing every year.
15labFree MemberTread depth makes a significant difference to aquaplaning performance, but it is really really unlikely you need that. Wet roads don’t cause aquaplaning, for that you need a significant depth of water across the road for a continued period of time. For sure that can happen, briefly, a couple of times in your driving career, but it is extremely rare.
Aquaplaning is not your car lurching when you hit a puddle, it’s a complete loss of grip as if you are on ice. I’ve only experienced it once, in 20 years of driving, and neatly pirouetted off a dual carriageway
1OnzadogFree MemberThe point about lease companies being, as much as they like saving money, killing clients due to 2mm of tyre tread isn’t a good look.
The other thing that people seem to not be giving much thought to is water. If it’s not going to rain between now and then, the OP might as well crack on.
I remember watching one of those things on the telly following police around. Some kid had gone off the side of Cat and Fiddle and the cop was blaming the lack of tread but it was a perfectly dry warm summer’s day.
Just let me caveat that by pointing out that a little rain after a long dry spell can be even more slippery than prolonged heavy rain due to the build up of oil and unburned fuel particles on the road floating in the thin film of water. A proper heavy rain will help that run off.
We do seem to be creeping back to the surfmat days here. Is the OP talking about normal sedate journeys with the family or being a driving gif in the ragged edge? Needing new but properly bedded in discs and pads, new but warmed tyres and pressures set with a certified gauge to 0.1 psi of recommend pressure?
Yes, tyre performance drops of as they wear and it’s a gradual decline that most don’t notice. Is the OP ok to drive in the summer, not like a dick, where a small portion of one tyre is still over 1mm away from the legal limit? Yes, yes he is.
EdukatorFree MemberDid you measure the tread depth on those tyres that aquaplaned, 5lab? Or if not tell us if they were new, worn or well worn. Once in twenty years sound like a realy good advert for having plenty of tread.
4SpinFree Memberbelieve the amount of absolute guff I just read through here
In my head, many of the posters are wearing reflective vests and carrying clipboards.
1EdukatorFree MemberNah, crash helmet, fireproof suit and just had worn cut slicks fitted for a stage over Epynt on a wet Welsh day.
1andy4dFull MemberNah, crash helmet
jesus don’t start to bring helmets into the argument 😉
theotherjonvFree MemberNo wonder garages selling tyres make so much money on gullible people, they’re the same ones telling people their brake pads and discs need changing every year.
I’ve no doubt garages do make money from gullible people as well as the cautious, some would say overcautious – YMMV. I’ve no doubt that worn good tyres will be better than new surface-to-hedge missiles, I don’t know anyone that’ll dispute that, particularly if they are a serious MTBer that’s tried riding plastic OEM shitetyres over wet roots before. I agree with the Robertajobb post on p1, but we already are told what the difference in performance of tyres is by the A-E system, and just a bit of education that a worn A is still better than say a new D or E seems fairly sensible. Is that what the tyre retailers should be doing – yes this one’s 30% more now but at the other end of its life you can still use it at 2mm whereas we’d strongly recommend swapping the D or E brand at 3.5mm?
But it is clear that performance drops off and quite rapidly as you get towards the legal limit – and the legal limit is pretty low. Maybe you bought good tyres because you plan to run them longer. Maybe you bought them because you value the performance. IDK, you decide, I know what I do and I don’t need to defend that decision.
And because I work for a major UK national testing lab (not for tyres admittedly) I have to do two more things
1/ any test we run, or any other lab worth its salt, or indeed a magazine like Autobild, you can be pretty sure it is independent, unbiased, and true. EVEN IF the manufacturer commissioned it, we don’t make results up to suit their needs. Doesn’t happen
2/ Michael Gove said words to the effect of ‘we’ve all had enough of experts’. And yet…. here you are, knowing better than the independent testers. A bunch of clipboard carrying fannies, apparently. Well, I’d rather be one of them than stood shoulder to shoulder with Gove, ‘cos that’s what you are, you sad bunch of Gove fanboyz.
4redmexFree MemberI always buy tyres from names that have been around for years, French, German, Japanese,Italy but wouldn’t be too worried about an advisory as some inspectors get a wee bit carried away, brake pipes on a 4 year old motor due to not getting a polish
I’m more concerned by the 20% of folk in UK that drive with dodgy eyesight too vane to wear glasses
SpinFree Member/ Michael Gove said words to the effect of ‘we’ve all had enough of experts’. And yet…. here you are, knowing better than the independent testers. A bunch of clipboard carrying fannies, apparently. Well, I’d rather be one of them than stood shoulder to shoulder with Gove, ‘cos that’s what you are, you sad bunch of Gove fanboyz.
Much as I loath Gove he identified a very real problem which the smarter people involved in any sort of technical info communication have been working hard to fix. Unfortunately you seem to be taking us back in the other direction.
theotherjonvFree Memberhe identified a very real problem which the smarter people involved in any sort of technical info communication have been working hard to fix.
which is what?
thisisnotaspoonFree Member“what was even more striking in this AutoBild test was that the performance of these tyres dropped significantly as soon as the tread depth reached 4mm, particularly in wet and snowy conditions.”
Isn’t that just because the sipes and grooves designed to deal with the wet and snowy conditions are only 4mm deep? Which is why colder countries have a minimum tread depth of 4mm in the winter?
EdukatorFree MemberThe sipes go deeper than 4mm but the tyres get progressively less effective in slush and on soft snow as the groves get shallower. One of the ways the tyres work is that snow sticks to the tyre and snow sticks to snow. The more sipes and the deeper the groves the better it sticks. Back in the day snow tyres were made with big chunky tread blocks, then Michelin came up with the rubber compound and sipes that meant snow stuck to the tyres. The first time I used them was a revelation, no need for chains or studded tyres to get up to ski resorts. Over the years they’ve just got better and better. The current cross climates get me up and down stuff full Winters were scrabbling on 35 years back.
ircFree MemberI’ve only had a full aquaplane on the motorway once. Scary. Completely lost the steering. I’d only been driving a year or two. By luck as much as anything else I did the right thing. Didn’t try and brake. Foot off the gas. After what seemed like ages but was probably only a few seconds I got steering back. I wasn’t even going that fast. Maybe 50-60mph downhill. Heavy rain.
The tyres were legal but low. I don’t mind spending a few quid more on tyres to never do that again.
Away from tread to summers v all seasons. Last winter I could drive easily out my estate. A neighbour on summers couldn’t get up the very slight slope through snow to the main roads. I avoided a crash on snow covered ungritted or ploughed roads coming home from nightshift. Going downhill in 2nd gear a car pulled out of a side road couldn’t steer and hit the far kerb partly blocking my lane. No panic just steered round the back of his car. With summers I would have been into the side of him.
99% of the time tyres tread depth, brand, or type makes no difference. If being willing to spend a few quid more to have the edge in those once a year or so moments makes me a yellow jacket clipboard carrier I plead guilty.
kormoranFree MemberMy only aqua plane in 35 years was also motorway driving in heavy rain. Very odd, the engine increased revs as the wheels lifted off the surface. I instantly backed off the throttle and then the wheels contacted the surface again. A few seconds later it happened again and then I was out of the rain shower. Very disconcerting for a young driver.
As a winter tyre convert over the last 15 years, I switched to CCs this winter and am astonished how good they are in deep snow. Easily as good and probably better than full winter tyres of yore
1EdukatorFree MemberFoot off the gas.
Clutch down if you’re in a manual. Listen to the motor or engine in an auto and try to keep the revs constant. Foot off the gas and you’ll get engine braking – both wheels aquaplaning and the revs will drop so when you get grip again violent things will happen due sudden engine braking. IME in most aquapaning if you dip the clutch the car just carries on where it’s going, the problems start when one of the wheels has more grip than the other, so if the revs have dropped and you haven’t dipped the clutch the car will pull one way or the other as one wheel finds more grip before the other. Dip the clutch and there’s every chance you’ll maintain control as the car finds grip. All of that is most important in FWD but in AWD and RWD it’s still worth dipping the clutch.
In Short: In aquaplaning you don’t want engine braking so dip the clutch rather than foot off the gas.
I’ve never had aquaplaning in a car with ESP/traction control so I don’t know how that might influence things these days.
CougarFull MemberIs that what the tyre retailers should be doing – yes this one’s 30% more now but at the other end of its life you can still use it at 2mm whereas we’d strongly recommend swapping the D or E brand at 3.5mm?
Isn’t this basically Vimes’ Boots theory? You can buy cheap tyres which cost less but need changing more frequently, so you wind up paying more in the long run to have shit tyres.
GlennQuagmireFree MemberNot sure ESP will have a great deal of success in controlling an aquaplaning car, but should help correct the situation if and when traction is restored.
1CougarFull MemberSurely if you’re genuinely aquaplaning then by definition you have no control, the only thing you can do is prepare for when you abruptly aren’t again as Edukator says.
GlennQuagmireFree MemberI’m not disagreeing, I think it’s good advice. If the car is aquaplaning the ESP will kick in if it detects a spin, how effective that is I don’t know but probably not a lot as you say.
I did see an old video on YT where Tiff Nedell was testing a Jag on ice with ESP on then off and it made quite a difference.
SpinFree Member. If the car is aquaplaning the ESP will kick in if it detects a spin,
If it did what it claimed it would let you know before the aquaplaning started. 🙂
theotherjonvFree Memberspin, i asked a question some hours ago that maybe you missed but interested to know what problem I’m creating?
SpinFree Memberin, i asked a question some hours ago that maybe you missed but interested to know what problem I’m creating?
It wasn’t that I didn’t see it it was that I didn’t feel like there was much point but here goes…
The problem Gove identified is that there is a loss of public trust in ‘experts’. I think this is a real phenomenon and that there are actually some valid reasons for it. And some less valid reasons obviously.
From your previous post it looked like you were suggesting that it was foolish at the very least for people not to act on information like that given by independent tyre tests. The reality is much more nuanced and the way to build trust in ‘experts’ is to acknowledge the nuance rather than assuming people are simply idiots for doing something different.
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