Tires Toyo or Tesla

Tesla Tires
phobos_664
  • Ride comfort:
Rating 4.0

I don't think savings should be the main driver to get a Tesla. A lot of things can influence if you save money or not compared to an ICE car. In my case...yes. Insurance costs vary by a ton of factors. Where I live insurance is paid annually and mine is $1500 for a full cover, which is like $125 a month. More than your average ICE car, that pays about $800 yearly. However I've saved money in every other aspect. I have solar so I charge for free. And the only maintenance I've paid were $15 to a local tire shop to rotate my tires and 2 gallons of wiper fluid.

Pros: saved money
Cons: higher insurance
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Tesla Tires

The tire and wheel protection already paid for itself. I got a bolt in my tire and they placed a loaner on my vehicle within the hour I call them. Set up a service appointment and had to pay a $25 deductible. Worth it for me.

Pros: paid for itself, fast service
Cons: 25 deductible
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Toyo Tires

Got some new Toyo Open Country.A/T 3s for the new truck. Way better look and seem to perform well in the snow and ice so far.

Pros: better look, good performance
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Toyo Tires

If you want something cheaper but still sticky, the Toyo R1R also comes in 205/45/16 and works great for spirited street driving.

Pros: cheaper, still sticky
Vehicle: Mazda
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Toyo Tires

The Toyo would be your best bet since the Bridgestone are being discontinued but if you find a set, they'll be a better price than the Toyo.

Pros: best bet, better price
Cons: being discontinued
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Toyo Tires

I run Toyo 35x12.50s ATs on my f150. They’re pretty nice for winter and I don’t hear them at all. I had Falken M/Ts on my Tacoma and wasn’t a fan of them.

Pros: pretty nice for winter
Cons: wasn’t a fan
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Toyo Tires
booyapsvr
  • Grip:
  • Noise:
Rating 2.5

Now, here is the weak link for the CCX-70- and CX-90: The factory tires (Toyo Open Country A51 on our CX-70) are highway touring tread, only 8/32" tread depth brand new, and a very tame and dry pavement oriented tread pattern designed for quiet ride. We live in the midwest and I am kicking around swapping out the tires, but therein lies another constraint, at least on our model: It has 19" rims and factory installed Toyo's are 265/55R19 size (109V load rating). That is an oddball/rare tire size.

Pros: quiet ride
Cons: shallow tread depth, dry pavement oriented, oddball size
Vehicle: Mazda
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
Tesla Tires
electric_mobility
  • Grip:
  • Ride comfort:
Rating 2.0

I needed new tires *ridiculously* fast, as the OEM set's treads wore out at an absurd rate. I honestly think I had a bad set, because even the tire guys who replaced them were shocked at how bad, and *inconsistent*, the wear was on 1-year-old tires. I got a 40% discount on them due to the warranty, but they were still $700.

Pros: warranty discount
Cons: tires wore out fast, inconsistent wear
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ... 54

Write your review

Help others - share your experience with this part.

Other comparisons
Loading...