Tires Continental or Cooper

Continental Tires

The DWS06s are great all-season tires but are a bit softer of rubber, if you live in the south where its routinely over 100 degrees (even hotter on the pavement) i'd pick something else as a summer tire. I ran them on my 2014 Mustang GT year round and had no issues getting anywhere in the snow.

P.S DWS stands for Dry Wet and Snow and can be determined based off which of those letters are still on how deep the tread is

Pros: great all-season tires, no issues in snow
Cons: softer rubber, not ideal for hot southern summers
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Continental Tires

The factory continentals were, by far, the WORST snow/wet tires I have ever had on a vehicle in 30+ years of driving. Hoping the all-seasons I have now fare better.

Pros: all-seasons fare better
Cons: worst snow/wet tires
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Continental Tires
Dodoz44
  • Grip:
  • Ride comfort:
Rating 4.0

I've had both on my m340i (currently on the pzeros). Contis lasted 15k miles and were down to 1 mm. Iirc the contis also felt a tad bit floatier. Awesome dry grip on both. DWS were great in snow, have yet to go through a winter with the pirellis. 0 complains for either when it comes to heavy rain.

Pros: awesome dry grip, great in snow
Cons: Contis lasted 15k miles, felt floatier
Vehicle: BMW
Mileage: 15000 km
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Continental Tires

Oh heck no to the Conti's unless you like a super soft sidewall that likes to bubble when it passes by a pothole let alone hits one. I don't get the fascination with them other than the price. I ran them on my old GLI and they were neither good in the rain/cold nor really all the special in the dry.

Pros: value piece is big
Cons: super soft sidewall
Vehicle: Volkswagen
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
1 ... 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 ... 186

Write your review

Help others - share your experience with this part.

Other comparisons
Loading...