1080
Owners' choice:
1080
Owners' choice:
In the latest Tirerack comparisons the new Goodyears are surprisingly good and the Cross Climate 2.
I go with the Assurance ComfortDrive. Lower price and able to focus more on comfort vs Michelin focus on mileage. ComfortDrive is also awesome in rain which you get a lot of in Florida
I have Goodyear Forteras on my GC and like them a lot. They're very smooth on the highway.
Just had them installed this weekend at Sam’s club. I have the same impression in terms of noise but they feel like they track pavement grooves more than the OEM so it feels less stable than stock at highway speeds. Overall same efficiency and better grip than the OEMs so I am really happy. Let’s see how they hold up over time!
My early review of the Goodyear ElectricDrive 2 tires just bought for my 23’ Bolt EV LT2 with about 500 miles driven. So far, very happy with the tires. They are definitely very quiet and smooth riding. On asphalt roads I pretty much got to listen hard to hear any noise. On concrete roads there of course is some noise, but not anything that would bother me at all. Takes bumps and rippled roads well. Efficiently wise, seems equivalent to the OEM Michelins. Not as pricey as the OEMs. So if you’re looking for what “ looks like” a good tire for your Bolt or any electric car, these seem to be a wise choice. I will re-review when I get around 2500 miles on them.
Good year weather ready tires are very good. I would get them for my winter setup if they came in 15's and my buddy just put them on his golf r as his winter setup.
My OEM Goodyears laster 36k miles. Currently, I have the Hankook iON EVOs on and they're at 4/32 at 46k miles. 2021 MYLR w/20" fully forged aftermarket wheels.
GT Radial tires are manufactured by Giti Tire, a Singapore-based tire manufacturer with nine facilities worldwide. Ironman tires are a budget sub-brand of Hercules Tires, which is in partnership with Cooper Tires, and manufactures its tires in different countries.
Realistically they are probably close to equivalent to each other, but both are low end budget tire brands. They seem to fair well on dry pavement and do marginally well in wet conditions, but are noticeably lacking in snow and winter conditions.
In my experience the wet traction on the Goodyear tires was terrible. Switched to some Falken Wildpeak H/T and see a lot better wet and dry traction.
Yeah, btw I used to have this same Goodyear Tire that wasn't this cracked but were 12 years old. these tires SUCK, sliding everywhere ffs. Got some nice new bridgestone blizzak ws90's on my whip now, haven't had any significant snow yet but I can only imagine they'll be 100% worth it. already so much better in the rain
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