Tread pattern vs. compounding for rain/wet grip??

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Originally Posted By: bourne
Please go ahead and read it again. Here is a Quote from there .....Again , like I said , each company has its OWN base tire.........


You didn't read anywhere in the quote you provided that says that - and while there is a grain of truth in what you've said, the whole truth is more complex.

Sometimes there has to be a comparsion to another tire - and it's frequently one of the current offerings - but ultimately it has to be traced to the SRTT - Standard Reference Test Tire - which the regulation is calling the course monitoring tire.

Originally Posted By: bourne
.....I sell tires for a living , I make it a point to know my product.......


Then listen and learn from someone who answers questions from people who sell tires. What you wrote next will help you sell tires - and I sincerely believe you believe what you wrote - but it is just flat, not true.

Originally Posted By: bourne
......The ratings only exist so that tire manufacturers have SOME sort of a quality criteria they have to meet. Meaning as long as a tire meets the requirements the manufacturer shoots for " traction, temperature and treadwear " , they do not have to test it any more, neither do they have to submit it for any more testing. .....


About a year ago, the company I work for - a major tire manufacturer - got a letter from NHTSA (National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration). One of the tires we made didn't meet the UTQG grade imprinted on the sidewall of the tire.

In a series of conference calls: They showed us their test data, we had to show them ours (in other words, did we actually conduct the test? We did!), then between the 2 groups, we figured out why their test results differed from our test results - It was a difference in manufacturing plants. They were right and we had change our rating.

Very embarrassing, but it worked out well. The folks at NHTSA could have been heavy handed abd slapped us with a fine, but instead, they worked with us. They were more concerned that we comply with the regulation and that what was published was backed by test data. Because we had actually conducted the test and had no reason to believe the difference in plants was significant, and because we volunteered to downgrade the published rating to match their data, they closed the inquiry.

We chose that path because running these tests is expensive and we couldn't justify the cost involved.

Originally Posted By: bourne
........A tire rated A might very well work as an AA rated tire, the company just chose to place it in the market with an A rating. Here is an example, we sell Goodyear Wrangler Silentarmors at work , rated for 50k treadlife rating. I know of at least 10 different customers , who in regular everyday driving , maintained their alignment and rotated regularly, got 70k+ miles with tread left to spare.

Wanna explain why Michelin with a treadwear of 500 is warranting their tires for 60k , compared to Goodyears with 520 rating warrantied for 50k ? ....


Sure. First, different parts of the country have different road surfaces. The AVERAGE treadwear in a given area will differ depending on where the tires operate.

For example, we know that Southern Florida has really abrasive road surfaces. They use aggregate from what is reffered to as "young limestone". It hasn't been in the ground as long as - say - limestone from Colorado. In the Florida limestone, the stone cleaves such that the sea shells leave a sharp edge that literally rips the tread rubber off.

The Pittsburgh area is also difficult on tire wear - but that's because there is hardly a flat, straight piece of roadway. Most tire wear occurs in cornering - straight ahead miles are pretty close to free miles.

Originally Posted By: bourne
....Or why this General tire with a 640 Treadwear rating is only warrantied for 40k for H rated of higher, yet the treadwear spec is the same for almost all tires ???....


This is where the marketing folks live. I can't explain why they've done this, but it smells more about marketing than it does test results.

Originally Posted By: bourne
....... One more example, three tires in 205-60-16 size
Goodyear Comforttred : 640 A B 70k warranty
Hankook Optimo H727 : 700 A B 100k warranty
Bridgestone Serenity : 740 A A 70k warranty

Now as an uninformed consumer , if you walk into a tire store , which tire looks to give you the best value for your money ? And what makes you think you will get that value ?....


The questions you asked aren't test results kind of questions. It more about how the different tire manufacturers view their marketing.

Very few tires are returned unbder warranty for wear. In other words, there is very little cost associated with offering a very high treadwear warranty.

The question then boils down to how aggressive does the company want to be. It's obvious that General is being very agressive on their rating, but conservative with their warranty - an interesting position. Same for Bridgestone. Hankook is being agressive on both. Goodyear looks like they are relating the UTQG rating to the warranty.

Originally Posted By: bourne
.......so to summarize , UTQG ratings are more similar to minimum requirements and are relative, effective when comparing tires made by the same manufacturer, not so much when trying to compare two DIFFERENT manufacturers.


The tire manufacturers have given you - the tire retailer - plenty of room to contrast and compare. While what you say is true about the differening rating and warranty and how they don't line up, it is quite a different thing to say you can't compare between brands. The marketing departments in each of the tire brands WANTS you to compare. They WANT you to have tools to use to sell their product. They just disagree on how to do that.

Some feel the UTQG rating is the best way. Those folks can push the rating very far. Some think the warranty is key and they'll offer a hugely inflated warranty.

Others are concerned about integrity and try to coordinate their rating to their warranty. (I know, it seems like foreign concept when we talk about marketing!)

This is exactly why the UTQG rating was created to begin with. But the tire manufacturers are pretty intelligent and have figured out a way to deal with the regulation.

I can appreciate what you are saying, but the published rating is based on both the test result and the individual company's marketing philosophy - and that varies all over the map. It gives you retailers plenty of room to compare and contrast.

If it makes you feel more comfortable to dismiss the treadwear rating - fine. It's a very complex area. But surely you would agree that the difference between a tire with a 500 rating and a tire with a 700 rating HAS to be different regardless of the difference in brand.
 
oh absolutely, I agree that treadwear of 500 from one brand is different than treadwear of 700 from a different brand. Thats what makes my job harder everyday. I wish they had a level playing field, for the benefit of the customer. And I do not doubt that the marketing departments of all these manufacturers have a field day when a new tire comes out.

I urge you to read this article :

Tire Review - UTQG ratings
 
I don't believe UTOG at all.

The OEM Bridgestone's RE92a(poor wet/winter traction since new) were rated at 140 on my wife's Legacy GT wagon and lasted 58k. The next set of UTOG 400 Bridgestone RE960's(great tires!) made it 46k which was their tread life warranty also.
 
I think we are in agreement - although we express it differently:

UTQG ratings aren't as well correlated to the actual treadwear rates as folks would like. There's a lot of marketing going on. The original intent was to test the tires and the pubished values would push tire manuafcurers to do a bettter job with treadwear.

Unfortunately, our favoriter government screwed this up. The result is that the marketing folks have moved in.

But there is clearly a differnce between a tire rated 300 vs a tire rated 700 regardless of brand - which is where I am coming from

You're coming from the perspective that the difference between a 700 and a 660 is without meaning - and I agree with that.
 
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Originally Posted By: CapriRacer
Originally Posted By: dailydriver
Capri Racer;

Let's compare a Michelin Super Sport, to a BFG G-force Super Sport Comp 2.

As far as compounding ONLY goes (taking carcass/construction/sidewalls/etc. out of the equation), are they NOT that far apart, one being a 300 t.w., and the other being a 340, especially coming from the same parent company's labs???

BTW; has anyone installed/used one of these very new BFGs yet?


This gets into the area where the marketing folks live. They want to characterize tires so they can sell them. Sometimes that means adjusting the rating so ithe tire is place where the marketing folks want it to be placed. The key is that the rating can be adjusted DOWNWARD, but not upward.

Like I said, I wouldn't pay much attention to the ratings when they are close. The difference btween a 600 and a 400 would evident regardless oof the manufacturer.


I was asking from the perspective/viewpoint of someone who still thinks that a higher treadwear rating translates into a 'harder' tire with MUCH less ultimate grip than a lower treadwear rated donut (the "can't have it both ways" logic), NOT from the viewpoint of most on here who only (or mostly) care about getting 100K out of a set of tires!!
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THAT is why I was comparing those two tires in that post, asking about their grip/'stickyness', since they are so close in treadwear ratings.
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ARE the manufacturers able to perform 'miracles' in this day and age and give us a tire with a 300 or above rating that grips/sticks like an older 200 T.W. rated (or lower!) tire?

Can we really "have it BOTH ways" nowadays (due to silica compounds, etc.)??!!
 
Originally Posted By: dailydriver
I was asking from the perspective/viewpoint of someone who still thinks that a higher treadwear rating translates into a 'harder' tire with MUCH less ultimate grip than a lower treadwear rated donut (the "can't have it both ways" logic), NOT from the viewpoint of most on here who only (or mostly) care about getting 100K out of a set of tires!!
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THAT is why I was comparing those two tires in that post, asking about their grip/'stickyness', since they are so close in treadwear ratings.
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ARE the manufacturers able to perform 'miracles' in this day and age and give us a tire with a 300 or above rating that grips/sticks like an older 200 T.W. rated (or lower!) tire?

Can we really "have it BOTH ways" nowadays (due to silica compounds, etc.)??!!


There is a technology triangle involving Treadwear, Traction (especially wet traction), and Rolling Resistance. In order to get better performance in one area, one (or more) of the other areas has to be sacrificed.

HOWEVER, new tread compounds are constantly being developed and those can change the overall balance a bit (but they don't change the basic relationship.)

So, No!. You can't have it both ways, but you can find tires using these new compounds that allow for improvements in RR without sacrificing treadwear and traction.
 
Originally Posted By: rjundi
The next set of UTOG 400 Bridgestone RE960's(great tires!) made it 46k which was their tread life warranty also.

That's pretty impressive. I've got about 20K miles on my RE960s and judging by the looks of them, they won't make it anywhere close to 46K.
 
Originally Posted By: Coprolite
I just want LRR and Traction. Forget the treadwear. Heck, I can barely wait to change my oil, never mind my tires!


Same here, except that I would even sacrifice the LRR attributes.

I was even going to go with a set of either the Toyo R888s, or RA-1s (100 treadwear, 'hard compound R', 9000 mile lasting AT BEST, DOT racing tires) this summer, but then I thought about the fact that they would be like trillion gauss, road shrapnel magnets, and I would be FOREVER patching them, especially when they get good and sticky in the summer heat.
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the best street tire in the rain i've ever had is the Goodyear GS-D3. at first i hated the massive void spaces (look at the rubber they removed) but it's dry traction was pretty dm good and it's wet handling was phenomenal.

another that comes to mind was the old Firestone SZ50 in 220 treadwear. similar tread pattern too. they don't make em in 220 treadwear anymore, i burned mine up in less than 20K miles, they make an SZ50 EP but its 340 treadwear. no thanks
 
Originally Posted By: [RT
ProjUltraZ]the best street tire in the rain i've ever had is the Goodyear GS-D3. at first i hated the massive void spaces (look at the rubber they removed) but it's dry traction was pretty dm good and it's wet handling was phenomenal.

another that comes to mind was the old Firestone SZ50 in 220 treadwear. similar tread pattern too. they don't make em in 220 treadwear anymore, i burned mine up in less than 20K miles, they make an SZ50 EP but its 340 treadwear. no thanks


Yes, the D3s have quite the rep in 4th gen, f-body circles.
BUT, have you priced them lately?!?!?
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I can get almost 2 complete sets of RA-1s (or other such R compound type tires) for the cost of 1 set of the Goodyears (albeit the D3s would probably last 1.5x as long as the Toyos (or others) would
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)!

It's funny you mention the SZ50s, as I actually won a complete set of them in 275/40-17 size at the second annual SLP Customer Appreciation Day at Raceway Park (in Englishtown, N.J. for those not in the know)!

I ended up selling them since they were the ONLY performance tire I've ever seen that was actually narrower in tread width than the same size Nitto tires!!!
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But, the set I had on my T-Bird SC before I had this car were pretty decent performers.
 
oh yeah, the SZ50 has a funny lip or something and a tapered tread width so it's narrower. but the 220 were awesome. my D3s were in 285/40/17 but last year i went w/ 275 Nitto 555 street tires as the D3s were more than double the cost of those. the shop knew a Nitto dist here.

But i regret it. i'm driving this car less now, i shoulda went w/ D3 and kept em on for 4 years. that would have been worth it because i felt so safe in the rain in the modded 4th gen. like superman shoes
 
Sheesh, had me a set of Nittos and was not impressed.

For a real "bang for the buck" tire try the Hankook Ventus V12. Best tire I've had yet on this car, summer only though. Superb dry grip, fairly quiet, ride ok, even better in the rain. These things are amazing and really inexpensive. Stunning value.

They are not quite as good coming out of the hole like my Toyos were, but I already own the record for a stock SRT8!
 
Originally Posted By: [RT
ProjUltraZ] oh yeah, the SZ50 has a funny lip or something and a tapered tread width so it's narrower. but the 220 were awesome. my D3s were in 285/40/17 but last year i went w/ 275 Nitto 555 street tires as the D3s were more than double the cost of those. the shop knew a Nitto dist here.

But i regret it. i'm driving this car less now, i shoulda went w/ D3 and kept em on for 4 years. that would have been worth it because i felt so safe in the rain in the modded 4th gen. like superman shoes


I would expect the D3s to be vastly superior to the 555s in the dry as well!
 
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