I must have a lead foot, never got more than 30k km out of any tyre on a front wheel drive, other than my old Transporter.
TWR is a test conducted by the tyre manufacturer (it isn't independant) and is a measure relative to other tyres within the tyre manufacturers range. They use a control tyre rated at 100 but the test is extremely open to manipulation & getting the result that is wanted.
It's useless to compare a TWR 240 Michelin with a TWR 280 Continental.
My last set of TWR 140 Bridgestone RE050A lasted about the same as my CSC2 TWR 280.
I got more than 70,000km out of my TWR 240 Michelin Primacy HP
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
I must have a lead foot, never got more than 30k km out of any tyre on a front wheel drive, other than my old Transporter.
With such big variances on distances claimed for the same tyres it cannot just be driving style, it has to be poor manufacturing tolerances.
I mean if they produce a 'bad batch' what are they going to do? They cannot rectify, or recycle large numbers, so they must just put them out there in the market place.
It's driving style, where you drive and the level of maintenance (eg:tyre pressures - inc actual pressure & how often checked; how often they are rotated & the rotation pattern).
Anyone that lives in Canberra will tell you that their left front tyre wears a lot quicker than the others. If you drive in the 20km ring around Sydney you'll wear tyres twice as quick than if you drive around the 50km ring.
A lot of people have no calibration or finesse in the right foot (eg: all the "axle tramp" complainers).
Some people brake really heavily, others not (hence why some people need front brakes at 30,000km and others like me are still on OEM after 170,000km).
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
30,000 is not bad. No more than 25,000 for me on the following tyres on various cars over the years:
Goodyear Eagle F1 - sticky but noisy (1 x track day)
Yokohama AD07 - super sticky very nice (1 x track day)
Toyo Proxes T1-R - very good in dry, terrible in wet (1 x track day)
Goodyear Eagle F1 Asym 2 - 23,000 still going .. should get these to 25-30k (no track time). Excellent when tyres are heated up, just good otherwise.
Other
Bridgestone RE002 - sticky. Average in wet. These wheels (and car) have gone to my dad, so probably will last 50,000 kms left lol)
Conti Sport 2 - 26,000 and still going ... these should last up to 35k, maybe 40k with wife driving the VRS and another rotation. Her previous Civic had Dunlop Sports that lasted her to 80,000 kms !!!!! Front brakes to 90,000. WTF!
Just note that wear rating between brands are not comparable in my experience.
Michelin PS2, PS3 or PSS for me next.
RS
R
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
Goodyear Eagle F1 A2 available for $195 from Goodyear Croydon.
Here's their eBay listing - NEW 225 40R18 92Y Goodyear Eagle F1 Asym 2 225 40 18 Performance | eBay
Walking Contradiction...
MY15 Skoda Octavia vRS 162 Race Blue Combi
bargain!
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
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