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-   -   Got to Get Tires (https://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28479)

TheProfessor 12-02-2022 07:40 AM

Got to Get Tires
 
So.

Get tires made in China?
Get tires made in Mexico?
Get tires made in USA?

ishoot308 12-02-2022 08:12 AM

Michelins
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TheProfessor (Post 378943)
So.

Get tires made in China?
Get tires made in Mexico?
Get tires made in USA?

Get Michelins...

Dan

FlyingScot 12-02-2022 08:23 AM

I really like Tire Rack--great online reviews take the mystery out of it, they drop ship to local installers

DEJ 12-02-2022 08:59 AM

Knowing what type of vehicle these tires are for would help.

Slickcraft 12-02-2022 10:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ishoot308 (Post 378945)
Get Michelins...

Dan

There are two kinds of tires, Michelin and everything else.

I recently got a set of Michelin all terrain tires for my Tundra at the local Alton Auto and they beat the Tire Warehouse price. So don't discount local shops.

Alan

BroadHopper 12-02-2022 10:49 AM

European tires
 
Don't forget Nokian and Vredestein brands. They are recent US brands yet been around for decades. Very popular in Europe and competitively priced.

Have very good luck with both brands. Rides nice and lasts a long time. Nokian tires are made in 'green' factories.

I buy all-weather models. I never went back to all-season tires.

codeman671 12-02-2022 11:52 AM

I am outfitting 3 vehicles with new tires presently. If you want winter tires, the Bridgestone Blizzak is one of the highest rated tires available. I just put a set on my daughters GLK350. The size was difficult so I didn't have a lot of options. I really wanted studded snows but finding a 235/50/19 studdable that is actually in stock was impossible.

My son's Titan got Falken Wildpeak A/T3W's. Its what was on it and they seem good. Reviews, availability and price were spot on.

Still shopping for my wife's range rover sport. I want studded snows but availability is tough in a 20" wheel. Her summer tires are Michelin. Will probably end up with Cooper winter endurance studded.

Nokian are the premier winter tire, but unless you have a common size good luck!

Tire Rack and Tire Buyer are good websites. Buying a set on Ebay and having them installed locally is a great way to save as well. I did that for my Ram in the past, and the Coopers mentioned above will probably come that way.

VitaBene 12-02-2022 02:26 PM

I use Tire Rack and am a Michelin fan like Dan. My local mechanic mounted balanced my new summer tires and disposed of old tires for $100 while it was in for oil change and sticker. For most shops, the hassle of dealing with the myriad options led them to mounting for Tire Rack. It was way easier for me to spend the time online, reading reviews and ordering than try to figure it out at his shop!

I run Blizzaks on my car in winter, my wife has Michelin winters on now. Agreed with BH on the other European brands too

TheProfessor 12-02-2022 03:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DEJ (Post 378949)
Knowing what type of vehicle these tires are for would help.

Smaller SUV. AWD. About 10 years old. Uses regular ordinary tires.

Seeking year round tires.
Good on highway. Rain, snow.
One brand/tires stay on all year long.

NH.Solar 12-02-2022 03:54 PM

Michelin Cross Climate tires have been getting rave reviews for a while now. The newer Cross Climate 2 is made in the USA and right now they carry a $70 rebate if you buy 4. I think that I'll be putting them on my Volt next spring. I too however run Blizzaks in the winter and luv them!

I.C.Isles 12-02-2022 06:13 PM

Related question. Is there anyone around that will store your off-season tires?


Sent from my iPhone using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app

John E 12-02-2022 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NH.Solar (Post 378975)
Michelin Cross Climate tires have been getting rave reviews for a while now. The newer Cross Climate 2 is made in the USA and right now they carry a $70 rebate if you buy 4. I think that I'll be putting them on my Volt next spring. I too however run Blizzaks in the winter and luv them!

I bought a used SUV in March with the Cross Climates and they have been great since, and I'm surprised to see they have the 3 peak rating. Looking forward to see the snow performance. At this point I'd highly recommend them with my limited experience, combined with a lot of reading reviews.

TheProfessor 12-02-2022 08:12 PM

Some above might be a tad expensive. Great tires though.

Looking at:

Cooper Endeavor Plus All-Season 225/65R17 102H Tire
and
Goodyear Assurance All-Season Radial Tire - 225/65R17 102T

Apparently Goodyear and Cooper are same company.

Both supposedly made in USA.

8gv 12-02-2022 08:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by codeman671 (Post 378966)
I am outfitting 3 vehicles with new tires presently. If you want winter tires, the Bridgestone Blizzak is one of the highest rated tires available. I just put a set on my daughters GLK350. The size was difficult so I didn't have a lot of options. I really wanted studded snows but finding a 235/50/19 studdable that is actually in stock was impossible.

My son's Titan got Falken Wildpeak A/T3W's. Its what was on it and they seem good. Reviews, availability and price were spot on.

Still shopping for my wife's range rover sport. I want studded snows but availability is tough in a 20" wheel. Her summer tires are Michelin. Will probably end up with Cooper winter endurance studded.

Nokian are the premier winter tire, but unless you have a common size good luck!

Tire Rack and Tire Buyer are good websites. Buying a set on Ebay and having them installed locally is a great way to save as well. I did that for my Ram in the past, and the Coopers mentioned above will probably come that way.

I am currently available for adoption.

BroadHopper 12-03-2022 07:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheProfessor (Post 378986)
Some above might be a tad expensive. Great tires though.

Looking at:

Cooper Endeavor Plus All-Season 225/65R17 102H Tire
and
Goodyear Assurance All-Season Radial Tire - 225/65R17 102T

Apparently Goodyear and Cooper are same company.

Both supposedly made in USA.

I think you should look at the Goodyear Assurance WeatherReady Tire
It has the Three Peak symbol. My GF has them on her Avalon and loves them.

SAMIAM 12-03-2022 08:11 AM

My boat trailer came with 4 Chinese tires....two of them blew out at 70mph
Less than 10K miles at the time

fatlazyless 12-03-2022 10:23 AM

Attention Subaru owners:

Need one replacement tire, and don't want to pay BIG to replace all four tires ....... this place in Manchester, NH ...... https://www.sennatires.com/Shop-For-tires/Used-Tires may have a matching USED tire to match the wear on your three good existing tires and delay the expense to replace all four tires due to an unfixable side wall flat, or something.

The big question is, of course, how the heck do you drive it down to Manchester?

Biggd 12-03-2022 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheProfessor (Post 378986)
Some above might be a tad expensive. Great tires though.

Looking at:

Cooper Endeavor Plus All-Season 225/65R17 102H Tire
and
Goodyear Assurance All-Season Radial Tire - 225/65R17 102T

Apparently Goodyear and Cooper are same company.

Both supposedly made in USA.

It depends on how long you are going to keep the car. Michelins are the best and will last the longest but they are pricey. Personally I prefer to buy what will last the longest so I can go longer before buying tires again. But if you're someone that buys a car every 5 years just go with something cheaper.

garysanfran 12-03-2022 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SAMIAM (Post 378992)
My boat trailer came with 4 Chinese tires....two of them blew out at 70mph
Less than 10K miles at the time

Given a choice, why would anyone buy anything made in China, other than because of the price differential?

Is there any product made there that is superior in quality to anything made in the USA?

I go way out of my way to avoid anything that comes from that country.

FlyingScot 12-03-2022 12:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Biggd (Post 378998)
It depends on how long you are going to keep the car. Michelins are the best and will last the longest but they are pricey. Personally I prefer to buy what will last the longest so I can go longer before buying tires again. But if you're someone that buys a car every 5 years just go with something cheaper.

One of the funny things about tires is that it's not just price vs quality--there are clear trade offs between longevity, grip, ability to handle snow and rain, ride comfort, noise level. Michelins are excellent tires, but within the brand, a person still has to consider these compromises. The reason I suggested Tire Rack earlier is that their reviews explain the strengths and weaknesses of each model on specific vehicles so that each driver can decide based on what is most important to them.

Biggd 12-03-2022 02:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FlyingScot (Post 379002)
One of the funny things about tires is that it's not just price vs quality--there are clear trade offs between longevity, grip, ability to handle snow and rain, ride comfort, noise level. Michelins are excellent tires, but within the brand, a person still has to consider these compromises. The reason I suggested Tire Rack earlier is that their reviews explain the strengths and weaknesses of each model on specific vehicles so that each driver can decide based on what is most important to them.

That's true, my #1 is value. I can get more miles out of a Michelin than most other tires. I tend to keep my cars for a long time so a tire that lasts longer is of more value to me as it keeps me from shopping for tires a lot less. I was in the Auto business for 50 years and sold a lot of tires, Michelin is my #1!

BroadHopper 12-04-2022 07:57 AM

Longevity
 
I had great luck with UniRoyal Laredo tires on my fleet of trucks. Ultra-long mileage and great reliability. Available for SUVs.

codeman671 12-04-2022 08:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 8gv (Post 378987)
I am currently available for adoption.

Unless you are actually a golden retriever puppy we aren’t accepting applications at this time.

Or a Swedish nanny…

bigdog 12-04-2022 09:55 PM

Town Fair Tire
 
I've had good luck with Town Fair Tire in the past.
They carry all the major brands, and sell at competitive prices.

I need to buy tires in the Spring for my F150.
Currently have GoodYear Wranglers, these were the factory OEM tires at purchase time. I currently have 40k miles on tires, and I'll be lucky to make it to Spring. I'd never buy these tires again!

Actually, had good luck in the past with "MasterCraft".
These are what Town Fair put on their Fleet truck vehicles, I may look at these when the time comes.

codeman671 12-07-2022 09:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by codeman671 (Post 378966)
I am outfitting 3 vehicles with new tires presently. If you want winter tires, the Bridgestone Blizzak is one of the highest rated tires available. I just put a set on my daughters GLK350. The size was difficult so I didn't have a lot of options. I really wanted studded snows but finding a 235/50/19 studdable that is actually in stock was impossible.

My son's Titan got Falken Wildpeak A/T3W's. Its what was on it and they seem good. Reviews, availability and price were spot on.

Still shopping for my wife's range rover sport. I want studded snows but availability is tough in a 20" wheel. Her summer tires are Michelin. Will probably end up with Cooper winter endurance studded.

Nokian are the premier winter tire, but unless you have a common size good luck!

Tire Rack and Tire Buyer are good websites. Buying a set on Ebay and having them installed locally is a great way to save as well. I did that for my Ram in the past, and the Coopers mentioned above will probably come that way.

I finally found a set for my wife's car. I was able to get Nokian Hak 10's/ studded on Ebay. None of the local dealers could get them. Ebay is worth a shot.

TheProfessor 12-07-2022 03:43 PM

Stricken from the internet.
Google buries/deletes class action lawsuit concerning Walmart selling new tires that were over 10 years old.

Intersting that large corporations can place pressure on Google to bury things negative.

Also interesting is how to find the date of manufacture of any automotive tire.
It is there but in very small lettering. Same small size lettering as to what country tire was manufactured.

SailinAway 12-09-2022 02:42 PM

I will chime in last. After lots of research I got the General Altimax RT45 at Laconia Tire Warehouse. Good price, excellent reviews on its predecessor the RT43. The RT45 is too new to have many consumer reviews. I like mine. I have not noticed the noise that some people mention. Ever notice how some tire reviews read like fine wine reviews? They notice things that the average person might not care about.

See my previous thread for discussion.

bigdog 12-10-2022 06:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fatlazyless (Post 378997)
Attention Subaru owners:

Need one replacement tire, and don't want to pay BIG to replace all four tires ....... this place in Manchester, NH ...... https://www.sennatires.com/Shop-For-tires/Used-Tires may have a matching USED tire to match the wear on your three good existing tires and delay the expense to replace all four tires due to an unfixable side wall flat, or something.

The big question is, of course, how the heck do you drive it down to Manchester?

I've purchased from Senna Tires in the past with great results.
Hard to find place, hidden among factory buildings.

I'll need 4 tires in the Spring and will be going back there for sure !
Many times they can get used match sets for 1/2 the price of new from dealership.

TheProfessor 12-23-2022 10:27 AM

Only needed one tire as a spare.

Got Cooper Endeavor Plus. Made in USA. $144.99 free shipping.

W/almart, A/mazon, and T/irerack all had same price. All with free shipping.

Chose T/irerrack. 2 day shipping.

Attempted to purchase locally. But none would match price.

ApS 01-01-2023 10:59 AM

Michelin Has a Factory in South Carolina...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by John E (Post 378983)
(responding to NH.Solar) I bought a used SUV in March with the Cross Climates and they have been great since, and I'm surprised to see they have the 3 peak rating. Looking forward to see the snow performance. At this point I'd highly recommend them with my limited experience, combined with a lot of reading reviews.

An engineer friend from eastern Massachusetts (formerly of Connecticut) recommends Michelin Cross Climates, but keeps a set of Nokia Happalita for serious winter use. (VW Golf and Hyundai Elantra).

Tires that are sold on new cars (and trailers) are usually the cheapest in every regard, so your used SUV purchase was a good "happenstance".

Every new cheap tire rides smoothly for about six months. My Coopers got hard-riding and noisy, so I got credit towards Firestones in Manchester. A year later, I found a boat owner who wanted noisy Firestone car tires for his boat trailer, so I got a good used-tire price and bought new tires recommended for a long-lasting and quiet ride.

Today, I've got great Hancook tires (made in Malaysia :eek2:) about seven years old. Next season, I'll advertise my used car tires for boat trailer owners, and likely get another set of Hancook tires. (Pending research--of course). :look:

bigdog 02-07-2023 05:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fatlazyless (Post 378997)
Attention Subaru owners:

Need one replacement tire, and don't want to pay BIG to replace all four tires ....... this place in Manchester, NH ...... https://www.sennatires.com/Shop-For-tires/Used-Tires may have a matching USED tire to match the wear on your three good existing tires and delay the expense to replace all four tires due to an unfixable side wall flat, or something.

The big question is, of course, how the heck do you drive it down to Manchester?

I've purchased from Senna Tire, and they are excellent ! Honest, good service, and was happy with purchase.

Have reached out to Everaldo (owner) for current tire needs.

bigdog 02-07-2023 05:41 PM

Jumping up a size... Issues ?
 
Would I have ANY issues jumping up a size from 275x65x18 to 275x70x18 ?
Truck will be used for towing a small RV trailer (18' 4000lb).

I realize 70's are a larger tire by almost an inch, and realize it will affect speedometer actual readings, but will jumping up to this size cause issues to the transmission, handling, gas mileage ?

Thanks for your feedback, much appreciated !

LIforrelaxin 02-07-2023 08:19 PM

When shopping for tires it really pays to do some research... As for where tires are made, honestly I wouldn't worry much about that... To be sold here in this country there DOT requirements that have to be met for passenger vehicle tires...Note when you here about trailer tire blowouts, if the tire is marketed as a trailer tire, the requirements are different. I don't by trailer tires, I spend the extra $$ and put vehicle tires on my trailers when needed....

With that said, there are many off shoots of the Major players in the game...
For instance I just bought some tires for my wife's car made by Starfire.. Doing some research Starfire tires are designed by Cooper.... I have enjoyed cooper tires forever.... So the choice became easy... After getting them on the vehicle I could see that they where an older cooper design, and when driving, had the distinctive hum, the ended the design being sold as a cooper tire, and caused a redesign of their passanger touring tire....Bottom line I can live with the hum, and save some $$.. (for reference the new cooper design was >200 dollar more...

VitaBene 02-08-2023 05:32 PM

Diameter
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by bigdog (Post 381083)
Would I have ANY issues jumping up a size from to 275x65x18275x70x18 ?
Truck will be used for towing a small RV trailer (18' 4000lb).

I realize 70's are a larger tire by almost an inch, and realize it will affect speedometer actual readings, but will jumping up to this size cause issues to the transmission, handling, gas mileage ?

Thanks for your feedback, much appreciated !

The aspect ratio will definitely skew your numbers. the diameter is the key. If you go too big, you will get some scrubbing. Here is a calculator that may help!
https://tire-calc.com/comparison/275...5-70-r18-inch/

ApS 04-20-2023 06:17 PM

Even Michelins Lose their Comfort with Mileage...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Biggd (Post 379003)
That's true, my #1 is value. I can get more miles out of a Michelin than most other tires. I tend to keep my cars for a long time so a tire that lasts longer is of more value to me as it keeps me from shopping for tires a lot less. I was in the Auto business for 50 years and sold a lot of tires, Michelin is my #1!

Michelin is recalling more than 542,000 snow tires in the U.S. because they don’t have enough traction to work in all snowy conditions:

https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2023/0...ough-traction/

VitaBene 04-21-2023 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ApS (Post 382871)
Michelin is recalling more than 542,000 snow tires in the U.S. because they don’t have enough traction to work in all snowy conditions:

https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2023/0...ough-traction/

These are all season tires that look like the were able to get enough traction when aired up to earn the three mountain designation. On the other hand, the Ice-X is a great winter studless tire


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