-18
No data
27
No data
-18
No data
27
No data
I seem to get 45k km from each full set of Goodride SA07s (215/45/ZR17). This is on a Subaru Legacy that spends most of its time above 80kph.
Got good ride tires for my 370z they held up around 150mph several times no issues or warping but they have horrible traction my car now feels like it has 400hp definitely recommend
And, dang, they really stuffed some meaty tires on it. Hope those are production spec and it's properly geared to turn them.
I had a paid off Honda Accord that got 27mph. The only thing it needed was tires and oil. I found it pretty funny that I was getting $3500-4000 a year in mileage reimbursement when the car was only worth $1500.
Those stock tires will give you grief, they give your steering a little annoying dance the closer you hit 170kmph/100mph. Work through those tires. Swapping to something else will almost completely get rid of the wobble.
Finally, check your tire date codes. Tires older than 6 or 7 years are no longer suitable for riding on, as they have lost a lot of their elasticity and therefore grip.
My current car came with Goodride tires from the dealership. While I didn’t rotate them they wore down to 4/32nds as well rather quickly and became scary in rainy conditions.
They look to be mounted correctly; however, I find cheap chinese tires like those don't perform as well as good quality tires, are more noisy, and wear out faster.
I used to think Honda is great until we had a CRV. It was a piece of crap. It shakes at low speed or highway speed. The dealer was so incompetent and kept asking us to replace tires, wheels all at our own cost but the problem was still there.
The Goodrides on the cheap M3 I bought gripped like greased plastic in the snow.
Write your review
Help others - share your experience with this part.