1194
Owners' choice:
24
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1194
Owners' choice:
24
No data
I have a 2019 100D with 22s, and I use the Pirelli Scorpions. My rears have lasted pretty long I\u2019m still on my replacement set from 1.5years ago, just replaced my fronts.
My winter setup is the same as my summer setup - 235/35/19 Pirelli PZero All Season Plus 3s on my stock Scottsdale rims
Pirelli Cinturato aici, la a doua ma\u0219in\u0103. Impecabile.
Uso no meu carro há cerca de 30 mil km, comparado ao pirelli anterior parece ser de categoria superior. Não tive bolhas, desgaste condizente, boa aderência inclusive em piso molhado. Recomendo
We had iX40 no airsuspension - we did have some of that feeling you mention on the stock Bridgestone Alenza tires. But when we changed those to Pirelli P Zero E (275/40-R22)- it was like driving a totally different veichle, the handling and controll changed so much it took me really by surprise. The difference is really that huge.
I just had these put on my ‘23 R1S. The ride home was smooth. I didn’t notice any difference between the stock Pirelli’s as far as noise and quality go.
My opinion, Pirelli was at one time a very good brand if you were looking for a performance tire, in recent years though it seems that they have become complacent and aren't really trying to innovate and as such have become a mediocre tire company at best. But for a decent low cost tire, Kumho is a fair bet.
My only experience with Pirellis was a set of P6 All Seasons that I put on my old Acura TL fifteen years ago. It transformed my ostensibly “luxury car” into one that rode like a cement truck.
Absolute garbage, they only lasted 20k miles on my XC90 T8. Pretty bad in wet conditions also.
Verdes suck. As others are saying, 3 peak tires are the way to go if you’re gonna deal with snow and don’t want dedicated snow tires. I’ve switched to scorpion weatheractive and my last two trips to Tahoe in heavy snow have been a breeze.
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