Originally Posted By: rpn453
Originally Posted By: SubLGT
Yes! At temperatures above approximately 5F. But at temperatures below approximately 5F non-studdable winter tires will begin to show a moderate advantage over studded tires when braking on ice. As temperatures rise to 30F, non-studdable winter tires rapidly lose the braking advantage they had at sub 5F temperatures.
Look at the graph and chart in this Russian test of winter tires at various temperatures: http://www.zr.ru/a/16906/
At -19C (-2.2F) the best studless tire requires 9.8m less to stop on ice than the worst studded tire. A significant advantage for the studless tire.
At -1C (30.2F) the best studded tire requires 58.3m less to stop on ice than the worst studless tire!! A monumental advantage for the studded tire.
Great link! It doesn't surprise me that the studless tires are better in the cold, because I do notice the studs don't dig into cold ice as well as warm ice, but it does surprise me that the difference is significant. However, it surprises me even more how big the difference is at warmer temperatures.
Leaving out the indecipherable Russian tire brand and comparing the Continental CWV2 and Michelin X-Ice North studded tires to the Blizzak WS-60, Nokian Hakka R, and Michelin X-Ice2 studless tires, the average braking distances are:
At -19C:
Studless - 31.3m
Studded - 37.4m (19% longer than studless)
At -13C:
Studless - 34.7m (1% longer than studded)
Studded - 34.4m
At -5C:
Studless - 54.9m (88% longer than studded)
Studded - 29.2m
At -1C:
Studless - 82.3m (149% longer than studded)
Studded - 33.1m
The studded tires are far more predictable, with the worst average stopping distance being only 28% longer than their best. The worst average stopping distance of the studless tires is 163% longer!
This is why it annoyed me when Tire Rack published the test that showed the studded Winterforce performing poorly compared to studless tires, while saying that they simply chipped the ice. If they had run that test at a variety of warmer temperatures, especially on wet ice, I think this Russian test makes it obvious that the Firestones would have been far superior to the others. The Norwegian test I posted accounts for temperature by performing "16-20 brake tests and the test series was repeated three times on different days and in different temperatures."
The studded continental performed much better than the studded Michelin at all four temperatures. For studless tires, the X-Ice2 was the best in the colder tests, the Nokian Hakka R was best in the warmer tests, and the Blizzak was the most consistent, taking the middle spot at all three temperatures. The Hakka R was probably the best overall of the studless tires, but not by a lot.
Even if the stud performance suffers a bit in cold weather because they chip the ice, at least they're doing something good for the next guy by roughing it up instead of polishing it!
If that's not proof for studded tires, I don't know what is. I've never run studded before, but the even slower response than last year in "clearing" the roads here (if you can even consider them cleared) has got me to thinking about studded for my next set in 4 to 5 years. The noise will be a hard sell to the wife, took my persistence and a guilt trip when we were expecting our first before she reluctantly agreed to winter tires. Got her around to the point where she asked me to find the best ones for the van this year.
Originally Posted By: SubLGT
Yes! At temperatures above approximately 5F. But at temperatures below approximately 5F non-studdable winter tires will begin to show a moderate advantage over studded tires when braking on ice. As temperatures rise to 30F, non-studdable winter tires rapidly lose the braking advantage they had at sub 5F temperatures.
Look at the graph and chart in this Russian test of winter tires at various temperatures: http://www.zr.ru/a/16906/
At -19C (-2.2F) the best studless tire requires 9.8m less to stop on ice than the worst studded tire. A significant advantage for the studless tire.
At -1C (30.2F) the best studded tire requires 58.3m less to stop on ice than the worst studless tire!! A monumental advantage for the studded tire.
Great link! It doesn't surprise me that the studless tires are better in the cold, because I do notice the studs don't dig into cold ice as well as warm ice, but it does surprise me that the difference is significant. However, it surprises me even more how big the difference is at warmer temperatures.
Leaving out the indecipherable Russian tire brand and comparing the Continental CWV2 and Michelin X-Ice North studded tires to the Blizzak WS-60, Nokian Hakka R, and Michelin X-Ice2 studless tires, the average braking distances are:
At -19C:
Studless - 31.3m
Studded - 37.4m (19% longer than studless)
At -13C:
Studless - 34.7m (1% longer than studded)
Studded - 34.4m
At -5C:
Studless - 54.9m (88% longer than studded)
Studded - 29.2m
At -1C:
Studless - 82.3m (149% longer than studded)
Studded - 33.1m
The studded tires are far more predictable, with the worst average stopping distance being only 28% longer than their best. The worst average stopping distance of the studless tires is 163% longer!
This is why it annoyed me when Tire Rack published the test that showed the studded Winterforce performing poorly compared to studless tires, while saying that they simply chipped the ice. If they had run that test at a variety of warmer temperatures, especially on wet ice, I think this Russian test makes it obvious that the Firestones would have been far superior to the others. The Norwegian test I posted accounts for temperature by performing "16-20 brake tests and the test series was repeated three times on different days and in different temperatures."
The studded continental performed much better than the studded Michelin at all four temperatures. For studless tires, the X-Ice2 was the best in the colder tests, the Nokian Hakka R was best in the warmer tests, and the Blizzak was the most consistent, taking the middle spot at all three temperatures. The Hakka R was probably the best overall of the studless tires, but not by a lot.
Even if the stud performance suffers a bit in cold weather because they chip the ice, at least they're doing something good for the next guy by roughing it up instead of polishing it!
If that's not proof for studded tires, I don't know what is. I've never run studded before, but the even slower response than last year in "clearing" the roads here (if you can even consider them cleared) has got me to thinking about studded for my next set in 4 to 5 years. The noise will be a hard sell to the wife, took my persistence and a guilt trip when we were expecting our first before she reluctantly agreed to winter tires. Got her around to the point where she asked me to find the best ones for the van this year.