Tires MICHELIN or Pirelli

MICHELIN Tires
colbyjames65
  • Grip:
  • Noise:
Rating 4.0

If you get a decent amount of snow, go for cross climate 2. Road noise is a bit higher than others but they are good in snow. I got caught in a nasty storm and they were great.

Pros: good in snow, great
Cons: road noise higher
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MICHELIN Tires

If you want to stay with the existing 22" wheel setup, I would talk with your favorite tire store about changing to 305/45R22 for the rears. The tire width will decrease from 12.6 to 12.0 and tire height will increase from 32.2 to 32.8, but you will have more options for all-season tires. Specially, the Michelin Defender LTX M/S2 is available in both 285/45R22 and 305/45R22 and is a very good tire.

Pros: very good tire
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MICHELIN Tires

This year got some Michelin cross climates. It is unbelievable.

I mean I really pushed it for fun and it had 0 issues. Great awd.

Pros: zero issues, great AWD
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Pirelli Tires

I'll be putting Pirelli Scorpion AS Plus 3s on my Ariya next month, and I'm in Wisconsin. They've got the insulation to help with road noise, the main reason I'm not doing CC2s.

Pros: insulation helps road noise
Vehicle: Nissan
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MICHELIN Tires
DougWantsALeaf
  • Grip:
  • Noise:
Rating 4.0

We have crossclimate2 on our Leaf and they are excellent. Summer driving are a little louder than the oem tires. When our Ariya is ready for tires, they will be a contender.

Pros: they are excellent
Cons: little louder than oem
Vehicle: Nissan Leaf
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MICHELIN Tires
xserox95
  • Grip:
  • Noise:
Rating 4.0

Cross climates are excellent, had many sets in my accord hybrid, but be prepared for a slight range hit. I haven’t run the pirelli scorpions, but from what other folks say the performance is solid, not cross climate level in the snow, but competent. However, they are quieter overall.

Pros: solid performance, competent
Cons: slight range hit
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Pirelli Tires

I run 225/40r18 Pirelli Sottozero 3. I hate the idea of trading dry and wet performance for better snow traction especially considering that I have proper UHP summer tires that need to be off the car when it’s already below freezing at night but during the day it warms up a lot. They’re not bad in the 2 recent snow storms that we’ve had, I only got stuck once but that’s because there’s was like 20+ cm in an unplowed parking lot.

Pros: not bad in snow storms
Cons: trading dry, wet performance
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Pirelli Tires

Stock mk8.5 with the stock p-zero all seasons, it's been icy, -10f to 15f, and a few inches of snow daily. Drove it through 8" of snow where my bumper was plowing snow. Pretty impressed. Most important thing is tires, I really wish I had snow tires. I have to drive slow and brake early especially with the ice. Luckily these tires seem to prioritize braking. If you don't turn or accelerate slowly they start to lose grip fast.

Pros: prioritize braking, pretty impressed
Cons: lose grip fast, wish for snow tires
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Pirelli Tires

I installed Pirelli Scorpion All Weather tires on my Mazda CX-90 about 3,000 miles ago since I am in NY. I recently measured the tread depth and found that they’re already down to 7/32”.

This seems like a lot of wear for such low mileage. My alignment checks out, tire pressure was set to the factory recommended levels at installation, and most of my driving is highway miles.

Cons: excessive wear, low mileage
Vehicle: Mazda
Mileage: 4828 km
Part number: 275/45R-21 PIRELLI SCORPION WEATHERACTIVE XL 110W
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