The TRUTH About Winter, All Season and Summer Tires ❄ Tested at 0c, 2c, 6c, 10c, 15c

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  • čas přidán 2. 12. 2019
  • I often get asked to do braking tests at different temperatures to see exactly how temperature affects the dry and wet performance of summer, all season and winter tyres.
    Until recently it's been impossible as you can't control the weather, and even if you started to test at a certain temperature outdoors, the weather would change through the test (it takes about an hour to do 5 sets of tyres in braking testing!)
    Now, thanks to Test World in Northern Finland, we've been able to test summer, CrossClimate, all season, winter and nordic winter tyres in dry and wet braking at 0c, 2c, 6c, 10c, 15c! We've also tested the snow performance of all the tires.
    The test car is a VW Golf using 205/55 R16 tires.
    Watch the video for what is a very interesting test!
    www.tyrereviews.com/Article/S...
    You can check out Test World here: www.testworld.fi/
    Find me on / jonathan__benson
    www.tyrereviews.co.uk for more tyre information
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @soultakis
    @soultakis Před 4 lety +125

    What about doing the same test at 30 degrees? It would be very interesting to see what the all season tyres can do during the summer.

    • @Twin.motors
      @Twin.motors Před 8 měsíci +5

      I was wondering this same thing

    • @SnakeEyesSwim
      @SnakeEyesSwim Před 7 měsíci +17

      Would be great to see +30 and -30. This way we could truly determine how dedicated tyres stack against all season

    • @swecreations
      @swecreations Před 3 měsíci

      @@SnakeEyesSwimThe all season tires' rubber (and also the central-european winter to some degree) is not soft enough at those temperatures and will start to act more like a summer tire, at those temperatures you definitely need a nordic tire.
      Nordic winter tires will rapidly start degrading and failing at 30C, especially if the asphalt has been sun-baked the entire day, and are dangerous to run at those temperatures.

  • @spavatch
    @spavatch Před 4 lety +98

    This one's up there among the most useful videos to ever appear on CZcams.

  • @davidellis1355
    @davidellis1355 Před 4 lety +121

    I fitted my Wife's car with a set of Crossclimates, while still running summer tyres on mine and now the temperature has dropped I can feel the lack of grip if the road is even slightly damp ... Just wanted to say a huge thank you for helping to keep my family safe and keep up the good work

    • @cristangratzianfarkas9582
      @cristangratzianfarkas9582 Před 4 lety

      Stupid

    • @tudvalstone
      @tudvalstone Před 4 lety +4

      Can you slow down 10 km/h when it's cold/wet and get a grip? Maybe not possible where you live, just a suggestion.

    • @davidellis1355
      @davidellis1355 Před 4 lety +19

      @@tudvalstoneI think you are missing the point, I was just stating that I can feel a difference between the Crossclimates and a traditional summer tyre, I can feel the difference between the two, when pulling away and braking in the damp / wet and no difference between them in the dry. I adjust my driving style to the conditions (so yes if it's wet I slow down)

    • @vitaminb4869
      @vitaminb4869 Před 4 lety

      As long as it doesn't snow/ice, you're good to drive even the most bold tires out there. Just don't drive like an idiot, or else no tire will save you from winning stupid trophies.

    • @B-26354
      @B-26354 Před rokem +8

      @@vitaminb4869
      I'd suggest driving on bald tyres is stupid...

  • @user-bn3so8wg5l
    @user-bn3so8wg5l Před 4 lety +241

    06:09 wet braking comparison
    08:05 snow lap time comparison
    09:05 dry braking comparison

  • @DasHalbblut
    @DasHalbblut Před 4 lety +388

    Wow, what an impressive testing facility! And what a fantastic, scientific review!

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +26

      Test World in an incredible place!

    • @MattCSLnut
      @MattCSLnut Před 4 lety +2

      @ DasHalbblut ... I was about to write the exact same comment 👍🏼👌🏼

    • @ErykSpace
      @ErykSpace Před 4 lety +5

      ​@@MattCSLnut Just wondering who sponsor and paid for this test? Hope not Michelin or any other tyre manufacturer.

    • @hellsing56666
      @hellsing56666 Před 4 lety

      Great video indeed. Just got some summer tire with my new car, a week later big snow, the esp was always blinking but keep me on the road. Winter tyres uncoming

    • @rarog1605
      @rarog1605 Před 4 lety +1

      Dude, the summer tyres got the best dry braking at all temperatures (0-8 °C). Better than allseason and winter tyres, oO?
      Is this really scientific? Why do you have only 1 measurement per point? It's pure amateurism.

  • @edwardmaloney8524
    @edwardmaloney8524 Před 4 lety +295

    Do the same test, but with 50% wear on all tested sets of tires (tyres).

    • @ManjaroBlack
      @ManjaroBlack Před 4 lety +17

      This is naturally the evolution of this test. Excellent content.

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +173

      Working on it, wearing tyres out equally is very expensive though

    • @itsagoal182
      @itsagoal182 Před 4 lety +1

      Would be similar results barring in very wet conditions (3D volume for water displacement is worse), but 2D foot print the same.

    • @edwardmaloney8524
      @edwardmaloney8524 Před 4 lety +4

      Looking forward to the results. My reasons bore from experience of Perrelli's on my '85 XJS. At 50% or less wear, they where ugly to drive on. Extended braking dry and wet. Then I went to an American tire, "Cooper Cobra" ZR rated, and for the load range required for the heavy XJS. I could not be more satisfied, all tge way down to 80% wear. Cooper no longer makes that tire for the 15 inch rim. I will never put Perrelli on my XJS again. Will have to either go tova custum 17" rim, or buy a set of custom Road and Track tire for the 15" rim.
      But for performance purposes, I think a performance rating at 50% wear would be of interest for those drivers that want at least 75% of their purchase to be useful.

    • @markp8295
      @markp8295 Před 4 lety +5

      @@itsagoal182 Maybe not. Michelin boast about widening tread patterns as they wear (inverted V shape. I don't know about others.
      It's meant to mean longer life early on and lower performance degredation when worn but wearing faster towards the end of life.

  • @henryrolt3747
    @henryrolt3747 Před 2 lety +21

    The main message I'm getting from this is that for normal UK driving, the Crossclimate is a staggeringly awesome tyre. Could be run all year round, or if you're an enthusiast, it's ideal to run in the winter, and swap to a high performance summer tyre for summer.

    • @andrewjones3967
      @andrewjones3967 Před 2 lety +2

      Agreed. We have Michelin Cross Climates on car and found them fantastic. Mixed driving through Wiltshire, Somerset, Devon and Gloucestershire and worth the money imo. Sadly Michelin don't make them in the right size for our other car.

  • @georgewhiteford9869
    @georgewhiteford9869 Před 4 lety +5

    Glad I switched to crossclimate tyres for myself and my son’s car 2years ago. And it’s all down to your brilliant videos! What price safety and piece of mind. Thank you so much!

  • @Unitedflyier
    @Unitedflyier Před 4 lety +18

    I have been swapping from summer to winter tires for about 4 years now. Everyone laughed at me saying it was a waste of money. Then it snowed and I was the only one driving around like nothing had happened. The roads were deserted except for a few abandoned cars, and me.
    They make an amazing difference in the snow and also when it gets cold. Summer tires you can feel start to skip and lose grip.

    • @alanhassall
      @alanhassall Před 4 lety +3

      I've gotten that too. My parents used to live at the top of a long hill. My dad had a front wheel drive Escort wagon. I had mentioned snow tires to him and he decided to give them a try. During the winter he would make it up the hill while most of the SUV's were left at the bottom. A few years ago a coworker did not understand why anyone would use snow tires. I took him out in my Taurus SHO and we braked hard enough to lock up the seatbelt reels in the snow. I think that he understood after that.

    • @04smallmj
      @04smallmj Před 3 lety +3

      @@alanhassall A lot of people seem to think that all tyres behave the same way. I'm not sure how they think that people in colder countries can drive on snow easily. I remember going to a supermarket when it snowed in the UK once. Everyone else had summer tyres and parked in the crowded snow-free part, but I parked in the middle of the deserted snow-covered section :D.

    • @andrew7440
      @andrew7440 Před rokem

      Good to hear that, exactly the same as me. Far more grip even on cold wet roads around 1 - 5 degrees C, without any snow.
      I remember getting strange looks as i went to work in a good depth of snow, as if people didn't seem to think it possible.

    • @maartenk7513
      @maartenk7513 Před 6 měsíci

      Also depends on how much you drive. I will consider all seasons on our secondary car. But on the family car, I just got me a new set of TS870 for a fair price. Mostly because they do well in the cold and wet. And to be fair, you will need to adapt your driving in winter conditions anyway.

    • @125daxJ
      @125daxJ Před 6 měsíci

      I currently run conti TS 850 winter tires on my old station wagon.
      They are good enough for dry use, herrendous in the rain and on snow they behave well even with a trailer.
      For mountain and winter use, I recommend strongly winter tires, all seasons do the job but just barely so yeah...

  • @varunsambi2004
    @varunsambi2004 Před 4 lety +52

    “Turns out the multi billion dollar companies knows some thing about tyre”
    That quote thou. 😂

  • @albertovicinanza
    @albertovicinanza Před 4 lety +6

    You're the best man, doing all the testing I've always wanted to do! I love you so much❤️
    Keep it up!
    Definitely considering an all season as a winter tyre next time around, we barely get any snow here but it does drop to around 0°C on some roads I travel.

  • @anthonyfmoss
    @anthonyfmoss Před 4 lety +1

    This is the test we have all been waiting for! Just started watching. Can’t wait! Well done for finally tackling this. The truth will out!

  • @Nemoticon
    @Nemoticon Před 4 lety +91

    You guys recommended Michelin's Crossclimate last year and it's been fantastic for the conditions I experience where I live. I can't recommend others to what your channel enough, it's a public service!!! Keep up the good work xD

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +6

      Glad you're getting on with them!

    • @AndyC2_
      @AndyC2_ Před 4 lety +1

      Firebrand Agree 100% 👍🏼

    • @lyubomirgeorgiev1465
      @lyubomirgeorgiev1465 Před 4 lety

      Where do you live?

    • @twotubefamily9323
      @twotubefamily9323 Před 4 lety

      You stay in england ...lol ...not sweeden

    • @AndyC2_
      @AndyC2_ Před 4 lety +2

      twotube family Don’t know what you mean - but it’s Sweden not Sweeden

  • @sebastiant.7032
    @sebastiant.7032 Před 4 lety +10

    Best Tyre review video I've ever seen! I would like to see a similar video between all season and summer tyres at 15, 25 and 35 C° both wet and dry breaking.

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +2

      I'd love to, but would be so expensive to do!

    • @OuttaControlCro
      @OuttaControlCro Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah I would like to know that too, I cannot find any crossclimate+ test at 20°C or 30, 35 So I do not know is it good in hot weather as summer tyre is?

    • @AdrianNKA
      @AdrianNKA Před 2 lety

      @@tyrereviews all the southern and eastern Europe would be grateful :)

  • @CallumBrierly
    @CallumBrierly Před 4 lety +144

    Brilliant test, I was hoping you would do something like this!
    One tyre test I would like to see now is how different tyre pressures affect braking and handling

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +47

      I'll add it to the list :)

    • @fredhug
      @fredhug Před 4 lety +10

      @@tyrereviews And to be exhaustif, impact on fuel consuption and mileage would be perfrect!

    • @GalantPeer81
      @GalantPeer81 Před 4 lety +1

      You read my mind, pressures, what that does to all different tires braking and handling, and what fredhug said here, consumption!

    • @noxious89123
      @noxious89123 Před 4 lety +1

      Slightly flawed test idea, and a good reason why you should use the correct size tyres for your vehicle and follow the owners handbook. I run my tyres at lower pressure when doing track days or at the drag strip, down to about 30psi with the tyres hot, from the manufacturers recommended 35psi when cool. The downside of that is that running that lower pressure on the street destroys the shoulders of the tyre, wearing them out far faster than the centre of the tread. Lower pressure = more rubber on the ground, because physics. Doesn't mean it's good for the tyres life span though!

    • @luckystrike656
      @luckystrike656 Před 4 lety +1

      15days ago the
      Tire Shop strangely pumped my tires to 1.9 and 2.0 instead of 2.4 and 2.5 I noticed imediatly this in consumption which decreased from 950km with a full tank to 720km. Now I have raised the pressure and the consumption its the same. Premium Contact6 and TS860

  • @motofan16
    @motofan16 Před 4 lety +4

    This is the single most brilliant tyre review video. Every driver need to watch this. :) Thank you.

  • @HammerHeid1
    @HammerHeid1 Před 4 lety +10

    What a great review, I love the science backed facts. Some conclusions from my perspective living in the west of Scotland an all season tyre makes sense for your average commuter who is not that particular about the increases in performance a quality good summer tyre will bring, more the balance across seasons and not to varied on differences at the wheel. Cross Climate /all season check!. I put these on my wife’s car where I on the other hand switch between UHP summer and full winter. The temperature question has like yourself has always bothered me on where it originates, now we have the science and the testing to back up. The OEM’s and manufacturer’s quite rightly didn’t bore the majority with detail not everyone is as pedantic about tyres than me, yourself and all other channel viewers than represent the 1% . Fantastic 👍

  • @BlacksterVFX
    @BlacksterVFX Před 4 lety +3

    This is the video I've been looking forward to for forever, thanks 👍

  • @Salsahaj
    @Salsahaj Před 4 lety +1

    One of the best and most credible tyre tests I've seen. Thank you from Denmark!

  • @pab702
    @pab702 Před 3 lety

    After watching just 3 of your videos, I had to subscribe. You provide a ton of good information on all types of tires. Thank you!

  • @JelleVandeMoortel
    @JelleVandeMoortel Před 4 lety +5

    Thank you so much for these tests! I always switched between summer and winter tyres but never felt confident driving on the winter set. I always wondered if an all season tyre would perform better in cold conditions without snow. You're review came just in time for my "winter" set-up, thank you again!

  • @MatteoBurroni
    @MatteoBurroni Před 4 lety +4

    OMG this is the test that I've ever wanted to see! So much interesting, thanks!

  • @airii
    @airii Před 2 lety

    Dude, I've seen a lot of your videos, they are all excellent, but this video made me subscribe. Keep up the good job!

  • @jorgecristovao5642
    @jorgecristovao5642 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent test! Was waiting for this long time!
    Great job! Thanks!

  • @JinC24
    @JinC24 Před 4 lety +3

    You make some of the best videos on CZcams! Thank you for such an informative video as always.

  • @jangruber1929
    @jangruber1929 Před 4 lety +6

    Great Video! I think it would be really interesting to see a comparison of snow chains, socks and other solutions for the harshest of climates.

  • @Moore_Jono
    @Moore_Jono Před 4 lety +1

    Fantastic test, excellent video and thank you for summarising what most motorists in the UK should be considering too.
    Keep up the good work.

  • @paweholski7362
    @paweholski7362 Před 4 lety

    Keep up the great work. The data You show is incredible and the tests are so well prepared.
    Great advice for mild climate to choose as a winter set all season CrossClimate+

  • @CaptainDangeax
    @CaptainDangeax Před 4 lety +4

    Great video, thank you. Living in French Brittany with wet and not so cold winter, the tyre of choice is of course Michelin Crossclimate. Great under the rain, good in the summer, that's the real 4 seasons tyre every driver would expect.

  • @EppeRRR
    @EppeRRR Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you for this test, it makes me more comfortable on the road knowing that I have Vredestein Quatrac 5 tires instead of the Michelin Energy Saver.
    I didn't got the chance to test it in the snow, but the past 6 month the Vredestein did an awesome job compared tot the Michelin Energy Saver.
    I read some reactions here about tire wear, I am really interested in one of those tests. Maybe some recycle companies would love to work with you and deliver some second hand tires of one of those brands.
    Love the content on this page, you've won another subscriber :D

  • @ArniVidar
    @ArniVidar Před 4 lety +1

    This is a fantastic test, and a great addition to your previous recommendations. I live in Reykjavik, Iceland, and thanks to you I tried the CrossClimate Plus (as a summer tire) for the first time this summer, and was mighty impressed. Now we're into winter and every day I do my own little tests of how far I can push them, and am even MORE impressed. Where they fail (understandably) is in pure black ice on pavement, but careful driving still got me through that one evening, whereas I'm sure I would have been stuck on summer tires. Unless the weather drastically changes, I can wait to fit my Hakkapeliitta 9's until I drive up north for the holidays, but so far it looks like I've discovered the golden combo of the CC+'s 9 months a year, and the H9's 3 months a year, instead of summers for 4 months and H9's for 8 months. That saves my studs, and thus saves me from having to buy a new set of H9's every winter!

  • @Tom55data
    @Tom55data Před 4 lety +1

    Great review as always, and really interesting test. Thank you.
    (and I do own the cross-climate tires because of a review from you some years ago)

  • @FlorinArjocu
    @FlorinArjocu Před 3 lety +3

    This deserves a lot more views, it is enlightening.

  • @itsagoal182
    @itsagoal182 Před 4 lety +3

    Great video, the best you’ve released and very informative.
    I use dedicated summer and winter in Scotland, and I use the Conti TS-860, it’s great in the snow!, peace of mind in case we do get bad snow.
    Depends though, if you live in town you could get by with Summer and All seasons, but for rural, or for peace of mind, then summer and winters.
    Once again, this is a great video!, thank you.

  • @pigpenpete
    @pigpenpete Před 4 lety +1

    Been looking around for ages for this exact sort of test, so thanks!

  • @00LAH00
    @00LAH00 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for this much needed test. Nicely done. It was enlightening to see the differences in wet and dry cold weather. Since it is hard to rely on dryness in the winter, I will be considering this for my next non-summer set.

  • @GodKing804
    @GodKing804 Před 4 lety +103

    This is Engineering Explained but with a budget

    • @skewty
      @skewty Před 4 lety +5

      The E.E. channel didn't include All Weather variant if I am not mistaken. Sadly, the lap time measurement is far from scientific. That number, to me at least, is a useless measure. Also, stopping distances are to be taken with a "grain of salt" as the human factor is hard to eliminate.

    • @GodKing804
      @GodKing804 Před 4 lety +1

      As in bigger budget

    • @jakobc1998
      @jakobc1998 Před 4 lety +1

      @@skewty Agreed, for an actual scientific study they'd need to use a large test group of drivers and have each one make several runs with each tire. Then after averaging those numbers you'd be able to draw better conclusions. That way, you still have the human element (since humans are the ones behind the wheel, after all,) but you have more standardized stats based off of it. Still, an interesting video and fairly informative.

    • @itsagoal182
      @itsagoal182 Před 4 lety +3

      Disagree, you need one person who knows what they are doing for these tests, you have more control of the experiment and better consistency....he did this test right, by conducting repeat experiments.
      Having too many people would introduce more chances of error, you must have “control” of the experiment.

    • @Rookiereece
      @Rookiereece Před 4 lety

      The videos are paid for by tyre manufacturers, have you noticed how Pirelli haven't been mentioned on the channel in months?

  • @djszido
    @djszido Před 4 lety +5

    Amazing review! Thanks. :) Last year I decided to buy Conti Allseasoncontact based on your review. Still not disappointed. :)

  • @GalantPeer81
    @GalantPeer81 Před 4 lety +1

    I've worked for Bridgestone's distribution warehouse in the Netherlands from 2003 till 2012 so I became a bit of a tire geek myself. And this video has answered a long time question that I had! Great videos, keep up the brilliant work!

  • @leevardy852
    @leevardy852 Před 4 lety +2

    Sooo much good info! This has help me making the decision from being torn between winter and all seasons winter setup... to not bother at all. If I could get cross climates as a run flat I probably would have.

  • @johnwallace520
    @johnwallace520 Před 4 lety +4

    I put winters on my car and noticed a massive improvement over the summer tyres which were really struggling in the cold and damp. I can't get cross-climates for my wheel size but I am very happy I made the investment in the winter tyres which have returned so much stability and grip.

  • @user-ct9wt1rv9h
    @user-ct9wt1rv9h Před 4 lety +3

    Who dislikes this? So much work put in this. Very well done, thank you for your effort.

    • @banditoandy9784
      @banditoandy9784 Před 4 lety

      Some of us live where we actually get winter conditions. Not 0deg C. Here it's -10C or less for 3 months and mountains of snow. Why anyone would ever need winter tires for these type of conditions is laughable.

  • @zaanea1
    @zaanea1 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you Jonathan for answering this question. It has been on my mind too. What a great test you did in such a wonderfull facility.
    Just fitted my winter Conti's and this week I'm switching all the family cars to winter tires. Always a nice time switching rubbers.

  • @olimpicsa
    @olimpicsa Před 4 lety +2

    All my questions about life has been answered in this video. Simply amazing video.

  • @fenrir7969
    @fenrir7969 Před 4 lety +9

    This was great, really nice to see some in depth independent tests on various types of tyres.
    I've been running the Cross Climates (both the original and the Plus versions) for a few years now. Up around northern England/southern Scotland they have been great. As a daily driver tyre they feel no different to a summer tyre in the dry and give me that confidence on wet roads. I've driven in snow a few times with them...
    First time was a real success, getting our front wheel drive car up a snow and slush covered 13% incline and these were partially worn tyres as well, down to 3.0mm - 3.5mm. Was quite impressed.
    Another time was when the Beast from the East hit us and for whatever reason we had an inch thick slab of heavily compacted snow (more like ice than snow) underneath several inches of snow. Needless to say, the car didn't leave home for a few days as even after the roads had been somewhat cleared by local farmers, the tyres (fairly new ones this time) just had zero grip on the ice. Even the tractors were struggling to find grip it was that bad.
    But apart from the oddity that was the Beast from the East, they have done well in snow, powering us along roads where others got themselves stuck. I can highly recommend them as a tyre you can run all year round in most of the UK and I will be sticking with them for the foreseeable future. The wear rate has been good and on paper is better than the Conti all-seasons.

  • @BreadAndGatorade
    @BreadAndGatorade Před 4 lety +21

    I think a great test would be to use half worn tires. I find all seasons tend to do great in the snow the first year I use them and are drastically worse subsequently. I believe this has to do with a lot of the sipes not being full depth in the tread.
    When I use snow tires I find the drop off is more gradual as the tire wears.

  • @dmachado0467
    @dmachado0467 Před 3 lety +1

    Great, great information. Live in Lisbon, Portugal where doesn't snow and temperatures really never go below 8ºC and mostly go up 30ºC on summer, so after seeing this video I lost all fears of going along with summer tyres all year round!

  • @piggymito
    @piggymito Před 4 lety +1

    Great video thanks for the help! I run cross climates on my van and I'm really impressed with them. I was considering dedicated winter tyres for my car (a6 quattro) but now I think I'll go with a set of cross climates! Top man, keep up the good work!

  • @robertm3951
    @robertm3951 Před 4 lety +99

    Winter Performance vs All Season performance tires would be an interesting test

    • @shellderp
      @shellderp Před 4 lety

      and vs studless winter!

    • @Mandrag0ras
      @Mandrag0ras Před 4 lety +14

      I think he already did that. I'm sure I watched it.

    • @sFde46
      @sFde46 Před 4 lety +4

      i think they made it two years ago about the michelin "crossclimate" tire. They tested it on snow, so I got them. Where i live, there are usually two-four weeks of snowy/icy roads - perfect for my driving style. Using them as all season tires.

    • @fartman10284
      @fartman10284 Před 4 lety

      Winter performance is the Continental TS860. And he didn't test an American all-season tire. He did that on a different video.

    • @fartman10284
      @fartman10284 Před 4 lety

      @@shellderp All the winter tires used are studless.

  • @terryallen5328
    @terryallen5328 Před 4 lety +5

    Got the Michelin cross climates fitted to my Audi A4 Quattro and I love them.

  • @michelperrotti7824
    @michelperrotti7824 Před 4 lety +1

    As usual great video, clear and documented explanation, keep the good job

  • @Fabs821
    @Fabs821 Před 2 lety +1

    Such excellent videos. Discovered your channel a week ago and can’t stop watching.
    Canada here, thanks for putting some numbers behind my feeling behind the wheel. I always felt that 7C was not precisely the cut off. Make me feels better when I am late putting on my winters…at least if it is not raining…

  • @samuelebrue9472
    @samuelebrue9472 Před 4 lety +92

    Best and complete test ever about tires!

    • @Zduneqq
      @Zduneqq Před 4 lety

      What a shame there wasn't snow breaking nad dry&wet breaking at 25-35°c.Almost perfect test

    • @cenariusbg
      @cenariusbg Před 4 lety +4

      I really missed the braking test in -7*C or even less... Now it's a bit ... What to drive during autumn /spring. What to do when its -10*C outside, this is the question. I know in UK you do not get such temperatures, but the rest of the world does.

    • @noxious89123
      @noxious89123 Před 4 lety +2

      @Ali Toygar Haykır Who the heck would use anything but a summer tyre in temperatures that hot?

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Před 4 lety

      @@cenariusbg It's easy to answer: winter tyres.
      The Nordic winter tyres are best on snow and ice, so if your driving is (almost) solely in that kind of environment, that's your choice.
      If you are having snow, frost, water and temperatures above and below 0° C, then the Central European style winter tyre suits probably better.

    • @cenariusbg
      @cenariusbg Před 4 lety

      @@timoterava7108 I live in a town. We have snow cleaning machines - the road is 'dry' but -7*C today. It will get colder => -10*C / -15*C with no snow/ice. This is a test that I need. For 0*C and above it's clear - summer tyres.

  • @simonlivesey586
    @simonlivesey586 Před 4 lety +9

    Good review. I've had Cross Climates on my last 2 cars, best, quietest tyres I've had. Gives me confidence during winter.

    • @bremCZ
      @bremCZ Před 4 lety

      At 69db in 195/65R15 they are much of a much when compared to others. Most all season tyres are between 69 and 72db on the noise rating.
      Plenty of summer tyres quieter, but of course plenty more louder.

    • @roystratford4361
      @roystratford4361 Před 4 lety

      @@bremCZ 3db is quite significant, it equates to 23% louder.

    • @bremCZ
      @bremCZ Před 4 lety

      @@roystratford4361 It's significance is greatly reduced in cabin compared to external. Because the rating is an external rating the relative difference experienced by the driver is closer to 5%

  • @Runoratsu
    @Runoratsu Před 4 lety +1

    Looking forward to watching this at home after work. Definitely a topic I had hoped for for quite some time!

  • @teddybobu98
    @teddybobu98 Před 4 lety +1

    The best test I have ever seen.
    Would love to see as well slicks and studded winter tires for all of these conditions.
    THUMBS UP! 👍👍

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Před 4 lety

      The studded winter tyres are the ultimate on ice, equal with the studless winter tyre on snow and not good on everything else.

  • @Turbotoaster1
    @Turbotoaster1 Před 4 lety +3

    good test and one that i too have wanted to see, really happy with my bridgestone weather control a005 so far this winter, hoping for something harsher to see how they hold up

    • @aldish25
      @aldish25 Před 4 lety

      The grip is good, but they will be done after 15-18k and gosh they're loud....

  • @fiskov
    @fiskov Před 4 lety +3

    as others said; bought cross climate+ after your previous review for my Golf R; i thought they where fantastic, i'm now running them on a C43.. *South England, Eastbourne way*

  • @NigelBuck
    @NigelBuck Před 4 lety

    Great test and some valuable results. Keep up the great work! Your efforts are much appreciated.
    Far too many people pay little attention to their tyres and some of your videos are real eye-openers which I try to show to anyone who will watch/listen.
    What you found matches my experiences with 'summer' tyres in cool/cold weather, including the nasty surprise you mention with the Conti Prem, nearly ending up in the barriers on the summer tyres. On your website I commented on the Conti Eco Contact, saying that they were "....lethal on muddy, icy, snowy or cold roads - the most dangerous and unpredictable tyre I've ever experienced in autumn/winter weather....."
    Incidentally, I replaced those 'ditchfinder' Conti Eco Contacts with CrossClimate+ which have been excellent in cool and slippy conditions just as your video shows, but were also fine at 30+ degrees C in the summer just gone, not noticeably inferior to the Eco Contacts. My wife has Vector Gen2 on her car and they're at least as good as the CrossClimates on cool/cold slippy roads but lack the CrossClimate's sportiness on cold dry roads.

  • @GGMan
    @GGMan Před 4 lety

    Absolutely brilliant video! All my tyre curiosities has now been fulfilled by your channel. Thank you

    • @GGMan
      @GGMan Před 4 lety

      I've been using Michelin crossclimate plus and have no complaints. They were perfect in The Best From The East.

  • @Digi20
    @Digi20 Před 4 lety +3

    Very very good test, as always :) Coincides with my feelings i had in the last winters here in flatland east germany - as long as its dry (quite more often than in the UK), the winter tires always felt less sure footed than the summer tires. especially on a sunny november/march day were asphalt temperatures rise above 8-10°. and especially if people cheap out on the winter tires and get some middle of the range ones in the smallest size possible for the car.
    the option to go summer biased all-season for the winter is quite interesting. best performance for 95% of the time, and the few days there is actually snow on the road you simply drive a bit more carefully.

    • @BojanBojovic
      @BojanBojovic Před 2 lety

      This is what I have plan to do as I do not like the squirmy winter tires. Would you say that All Season tires feel more precise and sporty than winter tires during the winter months?

  • @christoffern.4089
    @christoffern.4089 Před 4 lety +14

    Really cool test! I live in Sweden and I have tested my summer tires in the dry at -10.0 Celsius and they really owned my winter tires. (Contisport 6 vs. Hakkapeliitta 9) So I believe it has to be way colder for summer tires to be beaten in the dry, if ever.

    • @a64738
      @a64738 Před rokem +2

      My experience is that summer tires will always outperform winter tires on dry tarmac , but I have only tested it down to -15c but it will probably outperform winter tires on dry tarmac no matter how coold it gets... Problem is summer tires have 0 grip on ice and snow.

  • @Zyzzyx42
    @Zyzzyx42 Před 4 lety +1

    Honestly one of my favorite videos ever. I have shared this over and over with folks. Have even watched it many, many times myself too. I put a set of CrossClimate on my Chevy Volt early this last winter, and though we didn't have much winter this year, they wear great.

  • @alfie3836
    @alfie3836 Před 4 lety +1

    This is one of the best test/tester for summer vs all season vs winters

  • @jacendex
    @jacendex Před 4 lety +8

    Excellent video. Great information and recommendations.
    I myself use both summer and winter tyres and switch to and from between seasons.
    I have used the crossclimate and it works a treat in the dry and wet, the only downside I've found is when your in the countryside and the snow starts to get about 3 inches deep on the hills, they struggle for traction alot, the winter tyres I use (Ultragrip9) do not suffer the traction loss under these conditions. The only limiting factor tends to be ground clearance now.
    You get some funny looks when a Kia people carrier calmly climbs a hill on winter tyres when the local Land Rover Discovery's on their low profile sport tyres are stuck at the bottom.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @larsweinand4035
    @larsweinand4035 Před 4 lety +13

    Awesome as usual. One small thought though: While you are using the whole range of "winter season" tires, you only use one summer tire, which I would consider very standard. However, many cars run on UHP or HP tires by default. While you can't surely test every variation, it would have been interresting to see how a UHP compares to a standard summer in those conditions. Given my own experience with a PSS at 2 degrees, I'm sure the temperature curves would be a lot different - and the risks at cold temps a lot higher.

  • @kristofn97
    @kristofn97 Před 4 lety +1

    The test that I looking for ages. Thank you!!

  • @aliemreozkan
    @aliemreozkan Před 4 lety

    Best tire comp. video I have ever seen. Keep up good work!

  • @NathanOakley1980
    @NathanOakley1980 Před 4 lety +68

    Got the crossclimate based on a previous review you did, by coincidence the guy who fit them also had crossclimate on his car.
    Delighted with them, excellent in all conditions. Didn’t notice any loss from the summer tyre, definitely better than a winter tyres in the UK. Having two sets just seems crazy when the crossclimate are as good as they are.

  • @Spreadie
    @Spreadie Před 4 lety +33

    Great video - I love the access you get for these tests.
    I wanna go outside and hug my Crossclimates! I bought them, with the idea that i'd change back to my summer tyres in the spring but found them an all round better tyre than the Bridgestone Dueller tyres my car came with, so the Mich CC+ have been on the car for the last 12 months.

    • @ChiYoungKC
      @ChiYoungKC Před 4 lety +1

      Those Dueler tyres are made towards durability sacrifycing some performance, Easily outperformed by crossclimates

    • @tihomirrasperic
      @tihomirrasperic Před 4 lety

      I buy crossclimate 2 year ago
      my god, what kind of tire
      Hold grip, quiet and make record low fuel consumption on my car
      I have Opel Astra 1.7CDTI (Isuzu engine)
      I got 3.9 L / 100 km on 10 year old Astra when I drive to Adriatic coast on regular road
      On the highway, consumption was about 4.1 L at 120 km/h

    • @SpamMeGooglification
      @SpamMeGooglification Před 4 lety

      The dueller is a very poor performance tire. Their RE40/RE50 or Pole S-4 are far better for handling/braking/safety in warm weather.

    • @rarog1605
      @rarog1605 Před 4 lety

      This is not a scientific test, still. Know it.

  • @MichaelATH
    @MichaelATH Před 4 lety +2

    Superb video, that has just answered my burning question of "do i buy winter tyres to replace the pilot sport 4's for this time of year(uk)" Cross climate it is. Keep up the good work

  • @doncoffey5820
    @doncoffey5820 Před 4 lety

    The single most interesting tyre type test I’ve ever seen. Excellent, thank you.

  • @jno5
    @jno5 Před 4 lety +4

    I had Pirelli Scorpion Verde All Season and switched to Cross Climates; they made it feel like a completely different car, so much quieter and smoother. They stop a lot better in the dry (summer) & I also feel they do stop better in the wet.....
    Be good to see how similar tyres compare to each other, maybe always using a set of Cross Climates as your test benchmark tyre.

  • @deanhall28
    @deanhall28 Před 4 lety +3

    Been using winter / summer tyre combo swapping out at the end of Nov and end of Feb. From this data though might look at putting on some CrossClimate tyres when the winter tyres need replacing :)

  • @cdl0
    @cdl0 Před 4 lety +2

    This video addresses a very messy problem in a well thought out way that succeeds in giving a good enough practical answer.

  • @loc4725
    @loc4725 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm really glad YT recommended this. Fantastic review and that testing facility. Wow! 😳🙂

  • @cosmin10b
    @cosmin10b Před 4 lety +5

    After watching your previous reviews about tyres I listened to your advice. I have a set of 19 inch wheels with summer tyres and a set of 17 inch wheels with Goodyear 4 Seasons gen2. For south-east of England should be okay even if we get some snow.
    Thank you very much for the good videos and for the advice.

    • @fredericleger7327
      @fredericleger7327 Před 4 lety

      I have the Goodyear in 19’ , they are so much better than the Yokohama summer tires in the wet cold ; tried them in light snow last winter they felt as safe as my previous Michelin Alpin, but probably will prove less in heavy snow or ice.

    • @ashleylaw
      @ashleylaw Před 4 lety

      Good move. The 4 seasons are very quiet to. In the mountains very certain in the cold fog and damp. Good in snow to.

    • @mandycowey7635
      @mandycowey7635 Před 4 lety

      I had Goodyear 4 years ago on a 3 series and could t believe the difference in snow. Wasnt frightened to go anywhere in the snow with those tyres on. After saying that. I took a chance this year by buying a set of Michelin cross climate (price dictated). If they are half as good as the goodyears I will be very happy

  • @TheLondekZdroj
    @TheLondekZdroj Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for this video. There is one more thing to consider while choosing tires for the UK roads. In my experience winter tires comparing to summer or all season tires cope much better with a typical winter road debris like - rotten leaves, mud, some oily substances or all the mentioned mixed together. Additionally during UK's winter season the winter tires are much more consistent within the daily spectrum of temperatures. They feel almost the same at 7 degree C and, at 0 or even sub 0. Overall that is much safer than tires which within 10 degree C have noticeable performance difference. There is one thing to remember, tho. Winter tires comparing to some decent summer tires don't cope with deep water very well. On my summer tires I barely notice most of the puddles in my area while driving on winter set requires slowing down significantly to avoid big splashes and aquaplaning. Oh, and there's one more thing. In the UK number and depth of potholes increases drastically during winter. Thanks to a smaller rim size and higher tires profile my winter set of wheels helps drastically with comfort and minimalises rims damage.

    • @chrisanthony1312
      @chrisanthony1312 Před 4 lety

      WhatTyre.com's 2019 all-season and winter tyre guide adds further detail about the leading seasonal tyres: whattyre.com/news/what-are-all-season-and-winter-tyres/

  • @tinjardas4152
    @tinjardas4152 Před 3 lety +1

    Once again great test and lots of valuable information. Keep up the good work. Cheers.

  • @TheTallRaver
    @TheTallRaver Před 4 lety

    Fantastic idea and great execution! Thank you for these highly informative tests!👍👍👍

  • @bokica4089
    @bokica4089 Před 4 lety +37

    Excellent test , but it would be really nice if you continued the test even further to see how the tyres would handle up to 30 degrees Celsius on wet and dry (of course summer tyres would be reference) I'm especially curious about the Michelin CrossClimate+

  • @SpeedyBangBong
    @SpeedyBangBong Před 4 lety +5

    Finally! I would love to see every review as scientific as this was. Congratulations and thanks! If I could drop a small idea, I would also love to see test old vs new tire, or old, barely usable winter vs new winter and so on.

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety

      Would love to do it but wear testing is expensive. Hopefully next year

    • @nikospsycharis7667
      @nikospsycharis7667 Před 4 lety

      @@tyrereviews You could get used tyres from a shop to show the difference in performance. As I understand MZVC asks for that, not wear resistance.
      Great video by the way! Makes me feel nice recommending CC to my sister and two weeks after installation the temp dive to sub 8°C with rains and light snow.
      I start thinking CC+ for my Vectra C but hot summers(35°C+) is a discouraging factor. Or isn't?

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +1

      @@nikospsycharis7667 For wear testing you have to have the same age of tyres and have them worn in EXACTLY the same way for it to be fair. As for CC+ in +35c, they'll be fine, but not as good as a summer

  • @JakubNvk
    @JakubNvk Před 4 lety +2

    Would've loved to see snow breaking test (although we get a pretty good picture of what the results would've been). What an amazing facility! Great video as always..

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety +1

      We ran out of time sadly, they have amazing indoor and outdoor snow braking tracks

  • @johndoe-dw4wy
    @johndoe-dw4wy Před 4 lety +4

    You should have tested wet and dry braking at 30-35 degrees. In my country there are many who drive all year round with winter tires. Please show them what happens with winter tires at high temperatures.

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety

      I'll try for another test!

    • @TopSLO987
      @TopSLO987 Před 4 lety

      ​@@tyrereviews It would be very interesting to see what kind of results will you get at the test which @john doe suggested. Also the test at -5 or -10 C° would be also very interesting for research. Then we would see the 'whole picture'. I hope that you will have the resources for that.

  • @rob_lightbody
    @rob_lightbody Před 4 lety +7

    Love my Crossclimates!

  • @seismictuning1881
    @seismictuning1881 Před 4 lety

    Superb review, quite surprising results, thank you for this, much appreciated.

  • @ThePowerVANO
    @ThePowerVANO Před 4 lety +1

    This is the single most useful tire test video ever. The wet braking has been so revealing!

  • @johnmorris7815
    @johnmorris7815 Před 4 lety +3

    I’ve given up using summer tyres, I only use M cross climate all year round, it works well on road but will also get you out of a muddy field in the summer where a summer tyre won’t.

  • @timothyblake5532
    @timothyblake5532 Před 4 lety +6

    Iam living in germany and iam using sommer tyres for summer, (Premium Contact6) oder for winter All Season Tyres (Vector 4s G2).

  • @GavinEarnshaw
    @GavinEarnshaw Před 4 lety +1

    Jon, many thanks for a very useful video. I think the best and most useful section was when you mentioned about the Summer tyre not coping with the greasy corner on the cold surface. Which is a very common situation out here in the countryside.
    This will now be added to my small list of vids I show when teaching 4x4 driving. Locally I've been teaching the rural Policing team and they have been able to go back to base and use this type of information to get decent tyres on. Last year's stupidly named 'Beast from the East' they had 17 4x4 (mostly Soft-roaders) and couldn't use any of them as they had no traction. Your site and these videos help to get the message out. I personally run the Nokian Weatherproof SUV on my Range Rover, the Mrs' car has winters at the moment as she works on the edge of Dartomoor and often has icy roads. The kids cars have Nokian Weatherproof (rather than Mic CC+) for the muddy roads. I've just put on the Nokian Rotiiva AT Plus on the Defender 90 after many years of major AT brands.

    • @tyrereviews
      @tyrereviews  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for the kind words. I'm looking at doing more 4x4 content this year so hopefully it'll be useful

  • @kenleach2516
    @kenleach2516 Před 4 lety

    Great real testing, unbias too.
    Keep it up.
    Learning more about tyres and appreciate it

  • @campbellab
    @campbellab Před 4 lety +3

    I can imagine it was a bit terrifying trying to push snow lap times in basically a walled tunnel with no run off?
    Just gone crossclimate+ for my winter replacement set so happy with your conclusions.

  • @momchilminkov5722
    @momchilminkov5722 Před 4 lety +3

    My brother bought a set of Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 for his new Astra. Went 2 summers to Turkey and Greece on vacations in blistering heat (500+ and 300+ miles in one direction, car full with people and luggage) and drives them in our winter which is in the range of -5 to 5 Celsius, typically. In 3 years only these on the car - no problems at all for 20k+ miles. My advice is to just buy an All-season set from one of the reputable manufacturers like Goodyear, Continental, Michelin etc and forget about it. Apparently we reached the point when there IS a thing like an all-season tyre.

    • @dennyc4135
      @dennyc4135 Před 4 lety

      Yes, most of the top brand doing a very good ALL Seasons tyre these days.. some better than other but theyr're pretty good all year round in general

  • @XavierMontet
    @XavierMontet Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for this interesting test! Glad to have chosen the CrossClimate + for my car 🙂

  • @MacWalther
    @MacWalther Před 4 lety

    Your reviews are why I have Winter tires for all my vehicles. I work in vehicle crash safety and some of the engineers question why I would put snow tires on a brand new 4x4 truck... Please keep spreading the word.

  • @anthdci
    @anthdci Před 4 lety +241

    Got a set of cross climates on your recommendation. Can’t rate them highly enough.

  • @noxity123
    @noxity123 Před 4 lety +5

    I would love a test of the Crossclimate+ in hot summer temperatures. I have CC+ fitted to my car, and they feel a bit squishy when the tarmac is very hot (30+c). So while it feels great for the typical weather here in Denmark (which is very similar to UK), the summer drive to southern europe feels a bit compromised as the temperatures are much higher.

    • @AdrianNKA
      @AdrianNKA Před 2 lety

      I would love to see that test, too :) In Romania we have 35°C or more in summer and -15°C or less in winter. Would CrossClimate² be good for this scenario?

  • @bradcomis1066
    @bradcomis1066 Před 4 lety +1

    This was great!! Also question I’ve been wondering about for a long time.

  • @murraymortlock5186
    @murraymortlock5186 Před 4 lety

    Great video. I live in Western Canada and have been running the Hakkapeliitta in the winter on my BMW for several years and it is a great tire. I always had the impression that one of the reasons to change to the winter tires below 7 DegC was because the tires would wear a lot faster above that, and hence if the temperatures rise for a bit I drive it conservatively, but I didn't realize that the braking would be affected so detrimentally by higher temperatures. Thanks for the excellent study!

  • @nowin87
    @nowin87 Před 4 lety +6

    100% professional test as always. This test is very valuable not only in Britain. I live in north Poland next to the sea, where we don't have such snowy winters for many years now. Most of the time temperature it is around 0, and we have more rainy days than snowy. Even in the summer there are only few weeks with temperature over 20-25 celcius, and lots of rainy days. It looks like for this climate best option is to have all season or even summer bias all season tyre than having 2 sets of tire.

    • @yzwiazwiezekotekodkopaprez5428
      @yzwiazwiezekotekodkopaprez5428 Před 4 lety +1

      nowin87 running uniroyal allseasonexperst in 3city area for the third year.Very good all around performance and stellar feedback as well