1194
Owners' choice:
3
No data
1194
Owners' choice:
3
No data
I live in the Midwest so I went for all season tires. Pirelli P-Zero is what I go for. I had them on my last car (9³) and they handle really well in the dry, but have good traction in snow. They lasted about 25,000-30,000mi on the 9³. My G70 is RWD and snow was no problem at all and they’re very grippy. Have only had them about 4,000mi on the G70.
This will not definitely answer your question but I currently have XXX6s with Pirelli P Zero 30s on my 2022 Gen 6 and it fits with plenty of room left over (I am assuming there was no frame dimension change from 2020 to 2022).
I’ve got Pirelli P-Zeros on my RS5 since the previous owner put them on recently before selling and I have to say that they are actually good despite what some people say. I actually felt like they handled better than the PS4S on my fathers old A45 AMG and while it might be down to the car I still am not disappointed.
In most cases, I buy Michelin. My best wearing tires are Pirelli P4s, but I can't find the size I need for my current car.
Big brands like those are all fine for a daily driver crossover.
My personal favourites to mount are Bridgestone blizzaks, and have had wonderful results on my dad's rwd BMW E46 with Pirelli ice zero fr.
Pirelli Scorpion Weatheractive’s are pretty epic in snow & ice
Vredestein Quatrac Pro I had Scoprions on my previous 2018 Audi Q5 and they were not as nice as Cinturato P7 or Vredesteins. I am looking for quiet and smooth ride and these two are my top choices.
F1 tires make me so angry this season. In at least 50% of the races they are waaay too durable, like you could do a 0-stop race. Because Pirelli are a bunch of cowards who are scared to death of races with 2 or more stops
Im sorry but these tires are a joke. Soft medium/medium soft should never be a strategy.
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