StingertimeNC
Senior Member
Looks great. I was thinking about this setup for track days. (200 TW tires)
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while I dont track my car, this set up IMO is much better than the OEM setup. Car feel much more planted and compliant. The All Season 4 is great so far. We'll see how it handles some inclement weather, but they have great reviews for such weather.Looks great. I was thinking about this setup for track days. (200 TW tires)
Tight in what sense? I didn't notice anything special.When you put the Fast FC04 wheels, did you find that the rear were a bit of a tighter fit than the front?
Got some snow this weekend and these Vredesteins took it like a champ! Got a little over an inch of snow and the roads weren't plowed at all.... didn't have any issues at all.18x8 Enkei Raijin (+42 offset) with 235/40/18 Vredestein Wintrac Pros. Looks great, but drives....exactly as you might expect a winter tire compared to the Pilots.
Hopefully we don't get much snow this year, but if we do I'll be ready!
Are you regularly getting 4"+ of snow that you have to drive through for days to weeks on end?As an Upper Midwest dweller, I've been starting to think more about winter wheels and tires for my ITS. Before I took delivery of the car I had the dealer swap out the OEM Michelins for a set of Continental DWS06 rubber. I have no intention of driving the car on a track and these made more sense to me considering my climate. Am I missing some performance over the Michelins? Maybe, but I don't know what I don't know.
Anyhow...while I could run the Contis and the OEM wheels in the winter, I'm leaning towards a slightly narrower 18" wheel/tire set up.
Here's what I'm thinking...
Wheels
Konig Hexaform
18x8.5, 35 or 43 offset (I don't want them as close to stock as possible so probably 43?)
Tires
For tires I'm thinking something with a 3PMSF rating rather than a full-on dedicated snow tire. I live in a major metro area with good/quick snow removal so snow and ice aren't usually a serious issue. With the 3PMSF tire I don't need to worry at all about when it's too warm to run a snow tire. In theory I could use the 3PMSF tire year-round (but, won't).
Likely candidate = Michelin CrossClimate 2
235 40R18
These would be about an inch narrower than the OEM, and diameter is only 0.4% greater.
Thoughts? Other recommendations?
Thanks. I hadn't considered the 'stretch' of a 235 on a 8.5" wheel. More for me to consider.Are you regularly getting 4"+ of snow that you have to drive through for days to weeks on end?
265 to 235 is a reasonable enough width difference that you could feel a bit of difference but honestly the biggest difference you'd feel is the compound of the cross climate 2. It's far more geared towards colder climate and less for performance driving. As such, it's contact footprint is more longitudinal and less lateral in shape, which also bodes well for some lower tire pressure for winter comfort. For the greatly reduced lateral grip, if you're driving most of winter on dry or plowed roads, I'd personally go towards the oem width. It'll change the shape of the contact area and you'll lose a bit of dig into the snow, but you'll gain comfort over potholes and some more fun.
235 is also way too much stretch for a winter wheel in that size imo. On an 8.5" wheel I'd much rather like to see a square mount with a 255 for rim protection, especially over potholes.
I live in kc where our potholes have taken bumpers off of suv. This past January on my 17" winter setup with a 225 and 8" rim I hit a monster pothole that caused me to hit my head on the roof of the car. The rav4 behind me popped two tires and bent two wheels to unusable or repairable. The pilot in front of me lost his rear bumper to it and popped a tire. The year before I bent two wheels on a pothole on the highway. That all being said, if you're north of me I assume your potholes are worse and they're always my primary concern during winter and spring. I may just have p(othole)tsd...
8.5" is pretty much the default rim width for a 235/40. See the specs on TireRack.Thanks. I hadn't considered the 'stretch' of a 235 on a 8.5" wheel. More for me to consider.
Tireracks specs are awesome! If you look at the "tread width" that's the actual measure of the tire on that measured rim size. This means for the cross climate 2 it's about 0.4" narrower than the 8.5" wheel.8.5" is pretty much the default rim width for a 235/40. See the specs on TireRack.