Winter tyres - not your usual question

Husbandofstinky

Out from the Wilderness
Nov 8, 2007
1,515
12
Temperate Regions
For those already running around on winter tyres (obviously not Leon specific obviously but where else can it go) but how do you feel about the tread movement?

TBH I'm finding it quite disconcerting when the physics kicks in and the blocks move. Nothing too silly either and its movement and backing off.

Just an ask to how you get on with it and whether you ease off or continue with it?

Expecting a nil response as it disappears into the ether of the MK I Leon section.
 

dav3

devilishd4ve xbox tag
Mar 29, 2007
655
0
Essex
I can't really comment on how they handle as never used them. But aren't they meant to be used in snow/ice and heavy rain. In dry conditions they will not work as they are meant to:confused:
 

DannyC87

Rubbing is Racing :-)
Mar 4, 2008
3,459
0
I drove on mud/snow rally tyres on the road a couple of months back between rally stages of a local amateur rally. This was in a kitted out volvo 440 rather than the LCR but it wandered all over the road; it was fairly disconcerting to start with but you got used to it; it was more like directing a boat than driving a car! They do grip still once the blocks have moved and settled in again; the Volvo happily plodded along at motorway + speeds on them.. both on the road and through the forest :D
 

mjt

Active Member
Jul 12, 2008
365
1
i'm running ContiWinterContact TS810s and even with 4wd you can feel it.
They're designed for snow really, they wear quite quickly on dry tarmac
 

Craig Senior

I've been Tango'd
May 24, 2004
1,099
0
Yorkshire
I've noticed it but not so much as it's caused my to back off at all (Maybe I haven't been driving it that hard) The tyres are noticably softer than summer tyres, it's suprising how soft they feel and how much you can move the tread just by pressing it with your thumb!

Mine are 245/45 R17 Vredestein Wintrac Xtremes by the way.
 

Husbandofstinky

Out from the Wilderness
Nov 8, 2007
1,515
12
Temperate Regions
I should mention that the Dunlop winter sports tyre is not some nobbly off road and is classed as a winter performance tyre:

http://www.dunloptires.com/catalog/winter.html

Dave Winter tyres are not snow tyres. Winter tyres have more rubber in them to maintain grip at cooler temps (below 7oC) and a different assymetric tread pattern to dispel snow and water. There are many summer tyres with assymetric patterns.

Reading up about them I was aware of block movement, I know what it is now and its not the end of the world, but its just a little disconcerting now that road conditions have improved and speed has picked up. It feels like low tyre pressure/dodgy tcrs/ball joints.

I should emphasise that this is when carrying a bit of speed (sounds laddish I know). What I would could normal/usual plus a bit more cornering speed its not an issue.

It was merely an observation, you know its there and ready for it, but you still find it unerving when it happens - a bit like blinking when popping a balloon.
 

Tartan58

Ex Seat Owner!!
Apr 10, 2008
204
0
Edinburgh
well that's solved a mystery for me! I've been using Dunlop Winter Sports since November and have noticed the car feeling a bit more wobbly and having a tendancy to tramline more, now I know why. Still it was worth it during the 4 weeks of snow we had!
 

Zuhnu99

Active Member
Jan 9, 2009
18
0
Finland
I have a Continental WinterViking 2 winter tyres in my FR. I use those from november to the end of march. Must use those because cold climate. In this morning temperature was -22 Celsius.

Use google to find out what kind of tyres those WinterViking 2's are. Metal spikes are safer in icy roads.
 

mjt

Active Member
Jul 12, 2008
365
1
I have a Continental WinterViking 2 winter tyres in my FR. I use those from november to the end of march. Must use those because cold climate. In this morning temperature was -22 Celsius.

Use google to find out what kind of tyres those WinterViking 2's are. Metal spikes are safer in icy roads.
Where do you live?
Studded tyres are pretty much illegal in the UK as they're not allowed on Tarmac.
And there's never enough ice and snow to keep the roads white for long enough.
 

turbin

Guest
I bought some 17" rims off a TT which already had some studded Hankook i-pike W409 on them for the winter season in Sweden / Norway. As I drive quite a lot on ice and compressed snow I need studded tires. On wet tarmac the grip is way below my BF Goodrich summer tires.
 
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Zuhnu99

Active Member
Jan 9, 2009
18
0
Finland
Where do you live?
Studded tyres are pretty much illegal in the UK as they're not allowed on Tarmac.
And there's never enough ice and snow to keep the roads white for long enough.


I'm living in Finland.
In here we must use winter tyres from december to the end of february. It's in the law.
In here 80% of all sold winter tyres are studded tyres. Most of our road's have a ice layer throught allmost whole winter. Even main road's have thin ice layer because car tyres press snow to the ice between tarmac and tyre.
 
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