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-   -   Winter tires (https://www.cmoc.ca/general-mustang-tech-chat-46/winter-tires-229/)

BabyTisha 11-14-2004 09:19 AM

Winter tires
 
Ok, this is the first year I am contemplating getting winter tires. On my other cars I always kept all seasons on. So my question to you guys is....what good winter tires are out there? What to look for in a good winter tire? Any help will be appreciated.

anarchist 11-14-2004 10:29 AM

When I bought my first set I did a lot of research and the tires for me were the Pirelli SnowSport 210's. I still believe they are teh ultimate winter tire. This will be my 4th season with them.

This was based on reading up on a few different models and looking at side-by-side comparisons and reviews on tirerack.com.

Rumble 11-17-2004 08:15 PM

I use knobby mud-and-snow tires from Canadian Tire, on my winter car. Cheap and highly effective, although they're noisy on dry pavement.

In addition to good snow tires, you should think about ballast. I've never had to do it but I've heard people swear by a bag of concrete mix or a pair of cinder blocks in the trunk.

Mach 11-18-2004 12:16 PM

I'd leave the concrete mix at Home Depot and forget the cinder blocks and then you won't have to a mess to clean up when they crumble
Get some bags of Kitty Litter, placed in the correct position they will give you the added traction and if you do get stuck you can open them up and use them for a little bit of added traction .
Its hard to beat a good knobby tire

Max Power 11-18-2004 02:44 PM

Good knobby tires suck compared to a snow and/or ice tire. I don't know why it took them so long to come out with a good snow and ice tire. I just get them at walmart, anything is better then any conventional tire, and I just went for price...but what an amazing night and day difference.
For the price you don't get much better IMO.

Roadkiller 11-18-2004 06:12 PM

The guys down here who run "Autocross" (which is Autoslalom in a dirt lot with ice and snow) all swear by Blizzaks.

Last year I grabbed Dunlop snow tires from Walmart. I was very satisfied, good soft compound, so plenty of "stick" and an aggressive tread pattern. As mentioned, inexpensive as well.

I highly recommend weight in the back. I got cocky last year and took it out too early. I got caught coming home from work in a late season snow storm and felt a significant difference when pulling away from stops. Doesn't need to be a lot, 50lbs for example. Keeping your fuel tank over half full all the time keeps weight back there also.

Scotts88 11-18-2004 09:39 PM

Agreed. A good winter tire is a must!

As for weight, kitty litter is a great idea! One thing is not to get too carried away with weight. Remember the more you weigh, the longer it takes to stop ;)

Hey HFX98GT..great to see another guy from Halifax! I live outside the city now..but grew up in there! :tup

anarchist 11-18-2004 10:35 PM

I've never put weight in the trunk. I used to drive a 79 Trans AM with a 400 under the hood on all seasons and it was just fine. This was up north where we would easily get 6 feet of snow a few years ago too.

Being in the GTA, winter tires were a must to deal with the traffic patterns though.

machrmk 11-18-2004 10:54 PM

I have a set of Toyo Observe G02, they have been amazing on ice and heavy snow.

BlueGT 11-18-2004 11:24 PM

I second the Pirelli's.

My experience with them has been fantastic.


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