JHZR2
Staff member
I have just been using good all weather and all season tires (CC2's, PSAS4's, etc) in the past. They have worked amazingly well. I have been able to climb my 27% incline drive covered in snow, and even navigated rural mountainous roads during ice storms. That said, I have had vehicles with amazing AWD systems, my EV6 GT, my Acura RDX, etc. This is the first winter I will be driving a FWD vehicle. I have Firestone all weather tires on it now, but am contemplating Blizzack WS90's for the winter. Everyone always says "AWD with an all weather < Snow tires" but I dunno how you compete with an AWD system like my GT has when you put CC2's on it or something. Am I going to make it up my 27% incline in this FWD car with WS90's like my GT does on CC2's? Or is this going to be a case of "I knew better and wasted money being an idiot buying snow tires for a FWD"?
*FWD vehicle is my Mother's. It is a 2005 Buick LeSabre Limited, and appears to have some sort of locking diff up front, it spins both tires on gravel, etc.
I’m not sure I’ve heard that awd with all seasons is better than snows. In fact? I’m pretty sure I’ve heard the opposite.
A good awd system can do a lot. And with reasonable tires can surely get most people along well. It also is of no service on ice, and particularly when you need to control the vehicle or stop on ice.
That said, snow tires without studs can necessarily wither. My driveway has a very steep short section, and with snows, in the rain then initially drive on a bit of snow (packing it and hardening it) then more on top, I couldn’t get up last week. I had to get out and shovel. I was fairly surprised at that.
They’re all tools and no panacea.