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troquei os dois pneus dianteiros que eram os que estavam mais deformados e o problema foi resolvido, mas agora vou tentar entrar em contato com a loja que eu comprei pra ver se a garantia consegue me ajudar de alguma forma
Sounds great. Make sure the tires are not more than 6 years old.
I have a Chevy Cruze as my winter beater (with winter tires) and it\u2019s does awesome. Got me home in a blizzard last year where the highways had about 8 inches of snow on them.
Bolts tend to eat through tires faster than my other cars, but that may be because it's fun to drive, so I accelerate and corner a little faster than I do in other cars. But this is a complaint that I hear from a lot of other EV drivers too.
Having gone from a WRX to a Chevy bolt, it is a very different experience. The WRX was a thousand times more fun. The turbo constantly begged you to go faster. It cornered flat and came with super sticky tires so you could go around a corner at a crazy speed. The bolt has solid straight line acceleration, but low rolling resistance tires make it much less fun, and slower in a lap around a track.
Sure, for about 12k miles.
Some tires are made in China and some possibly(?) better ones are made Vietnam, while made in Korea tires usually aren't bad, but may not last as long as expensive tires. For safety, I wouldn't go too cheap on tires. Many cheap tires have rather poor traction when new and become unsafe with only a few miles of wear on them. The Chinese tires often are made of very hard rubber, which might wear well, but has poor traction. There may be some in between tires made in the Philippines, but I'd avoid them. Kumho is a Korean tire company with majority Chinese ownership by a Chinese tire company. They make Phantom tires, likely in China, but even in Korea, they would be the low end. Hankook tires are "better" Korean tires. Not the best, but seem safer. I'd check tire reviews on the Internet.
They’re good for me since my car has camber and will just destroy the tires anyways
They're Chinese junk. They sorta work, but have 20% less traction and 50% less lifetime.
This probably won't be an issue for a 2018, but the spec tires that it comes with don't have good traction and provide a rougher ride.
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In March 2026 on PartReview, tires OEM Chevrolet were overall better than PHANTOM.
In March 2026 on PartReview, tires OEM Chevrolet were overall more popular than PHANTOM.
By vote balance, tires OEM Chevrolet surpassed PHANTOM:
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In March 2026, according to PartReview, tires OEM Chevrolet led more car-specific ratings than PHANTOM:
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