I do oddly really enjoy having new tires.... Just got my new snows mounted last month. Ready to rock.
That's why my next set will probably be those 3PMS rated variety from one of the big brands. All weather tires, I think they're called. Decent mileage rating, one set, etc.That was expensive.
Four wheels and four 225/60R18 Goodyear Winter Command tires ordered for my Challenger. Should be in by the end of this week.
No.Muscle cars are fun, but Subaru better in winter.
I agree with Jarlaxle. I have driven my Camaro through Michigan winters since it was new, always on winter tires. Blizzaks or X-Ice2's. I have always gotten where I intended to go, as long as I don't get overconfident. I have passed countless 4wd vehicles in the ditch, whose owners thought they could get through the winter on all-seasons because 4wd made them feel invincible. 4wd makes the vehicle accelerate quickly, but doesn't make them stop or turn any better than 2wd. And the overpowered pony car thing? The driver is the thing in the car that decides how far to push down the acceleratore pedal, and when. In low-speed turns, I have become calibrated to give enough spin on the rear tires to swing it around, and arrest the spin, while remaining in my lane of traffic. The main difficulty that I have found is that heavily siped winter tires don't grip well in slush. But in snow, they are great.
Planning and spending money to drive that in winter conditions significant enough to need winter tires is a blunder.
It's less safe to drive at the same speed everyone else is driving, and less safe to drive slower than traffic too.
It's not just the wrong vehicle but also the wear/rust accumulation from it. The plan to drive it in conditions needing winter tires is wrong at the start, buying them just furthers this ill intention.
Next time, remind me that you want everyone to pretend to agree with your decision, which was on-topic when you aren't asking a question. You must want everyone to say "that's great" but don't want to see anyone who says it's not? That's where the delusion is.
GASP! An M5 in the snow?? How did you not slide off the road and crash in a fiery ball of German steel at the first snow flake? /SarcasmI drove my M5 in the winter, bought a full set of snow tires for it. It was not a great winter car, but it worked fine. My sister drives her 330i year round and we had a nice set of snows on my wife's Charger R/T.
He's driving a 7 year old Challenger, not a Ferrari, the car is more than capable of handling winter conditions with a good set of snow tires on it. My buddy that owns the local FCA dealership drives a 707HP TrackHawk in the winter with a set of snows on it and it's incredibly sure-footed, I'd say even more so than my SRT because of the additional weight on the front wheels.
If you're offering, I'll take a Grand Cherokee.Planning and spending money to drive that in winter conditions significant enough to need winter tires is a blunder.
It's less safe to drive at the same speed everyone else is driving, and less safe to drive slower than traffic too.
It's not just the wrong vehicle but also the wear/rust accumulation from it. The plan to drive it in conditions needing winter tires is wrong at the start, buying them just furthers this ill intention.
Next time, remind me that you want everyone to pretend to agree with your decision, which was on-topic when you aren't asking a question. You must want everyone to say "that's great" but don't want to see anyone who says it's not? That's where the delusion is.
I agree with Jarlaxle. I have driven my Camaro through Michigan winters since it was new, always on winter tires. Blizzaks or X-Ice2's. I have always gotten where I intended to go, as long as I don't get overconfident.
Ha! I've passed 4WD pickups and SUV's with the 4WD disengaged, struggling to get past an ice patch. Those days are pretty much over now that full-time AWD has become so common, and not just an expensive upgrade.I have passed countless 4wd vehicles in the ditch, whose owners thought they could get through the winter on all-seasons because 4wd made them feel invincible.
4wd makes the vehicle accelerate quickly, but doesn't make them stop or turn any better than 2wd.
Planning and spending money to drive that in winter conditions significant enough to need winter tires is a blunder.
Is this a joke? You deliberately choose inappropriate vehicles for winter climates where winter tires would be appropriate, then tell us about another blunder you made? It should be in a garage over winter while you use a more appropriate vehicle.
I drove my M5 in the winter, bought a full set of snow tires for it. It was not a great winter car, but it worked fine. My sister drives her 330i year round and we had a nice set of snows on my wife's Charger R/T.
He's driving a 7 year old Challenger, not a Ferrari, the car is more than capable of handling winter conditions with a good set of snow tires on it. My buddy that owns the local FCA dealership drives a 707HP TrackHawk in the winter with a set of snows on it and it's incredibly sure-footed, I'd say even more so than my SRT because of the additional weight on the front wheels.
Wish I could have done that.I got factory 17" wheels for my 300S because they were so cheap. I could get wheels and snow tires using 17's for less than just the snow tires for my 20" wheels.
I do oddly really enjoy having new tires.... Just got my new snows mounted last month. Ready to rock.