Winter wheel set up

Winter wheel set up

Author
Discussion

MDMA .

Original Poster:

9,215 posts

108 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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I will more than likely be running my E91 all year round. I got stuck a couple of time last year where I couldn’t get out of our street and got stuck in town (10” rears and MPS4’s). I’m going to get a set of winters for it soon. What’s everyone running who has a set? Staggered or square set up? Is there a preferred size for winter tyres? Was think a set of 7x17 steels as a starting point.

d_a_n1979

9,680 posts

79 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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FWIW - When I ran my E39s and ran 17x8s with 235/45/17 winter tyres all round

Coped superbly with the thick snow in the Highlands etc.

If you can run 17s and they'll fit over your brakes, go for them.

Some good prices on Camskill currently for winters and all seasons

survivalist

5,872 posts

197 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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You don’t say what model of E91 as some of them (335i, 335d and possibly the 330i/d) run larger brakes.

A square set of 17s will fit over all of the range and are very cheap used now. I had 284 wheels, but 285, 185 and others will fit.

Seen a few on eBay with winter tyres, although I’d be putting on new winters as they wear pretty fast.

Earthdweller

14,404 posts

133 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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Square set up on 17” is the best bet

I ran them on my E90 320d no issues and it coped with some rough Pennine winters without issue

Genuine BMW wheel sets can be picked up very reasonably now

SteBrown91

2,573 posts

136 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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If you have a 320d you can run 16” steels for the full ghetto look - I had a set for my F31 with Michelin Alpin 4s fitted.

Bought them barely used off eBay for about 220ish quid I think.

This is the only photo I can find (being low loader’d after someone smashed into the side of it!)


d_a_n1979

9,680 posts

79 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
MDMA . said:
I will more than likely be running my E91 all year round. I got stuck a couple of time last year where I couldn’t get out of our street and got stuck in town (10” rears and MPS4’s). I’m going to get a set of winters for it soon. What’s everyone running who has a set? Staggered or square set up? Is there a preferred size for winter tyres? Was think a set of 7x17 steels as a starting point.
All the E90 wheels here: https://www.auto-treff.com/wcf/index.php?tagged/55...

Yours is the 320D, unless you've maxed out the brakes, you could even go 16s biggrin

Mr Tidy

24,363 posts

134 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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My E91 325i came fitted with 16" wheels and winters just a couple of weeks before the Beast from the East arrived in 2018 and they were great.

I replaced it the next year with an E90 330i that came with 2 sets of Style 158 wheels, summers and winters. They are square sets of 8J x 17 with 225/45 tyres and while I've swapped them every year we haven't really had any bad weather in the South since 2018 thankfully.
The 330i (and 330d I expect) need 17s to clear the front brakes.

PistonbrokePaul

843 posts

178 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
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I run a set of 17" steels in a square setup on my M140i over winter, they were the smallest steelies that would fit over the brakes (from an X1 of all cars) as I didn't want to run alloys with winter tyres in case I kerbed one or buckled it.


helix402

7,913 posts

189 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
225/45/17 is the size to maintain the original radius in a 17”. I use this size with a set of 17” E9x alloys. Style 285. Re tyre choice I have non run flat Mich Cross Climates. I find them noisy and they make the car feel very soft and floaty at higher speeds.

I’ve not used them in snow yet. I wouldn’t recommend them.

Edited by helix402 on Tuesday 8th August 23:11

Mr Tidy

24,363 posts

134 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
FWIW the 16s I had on my 325i that were fantastic in snow had Bridgestone Blizzak run-flats on them.

Magnum 475

3,650 posts

139 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
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helix402 said:
225/45/17 is the size to maintain the original radius in a 17”. I use this size with a set of 17” E9x alloys. Style 285. Re tyre choice I have non run flat Mich Cross Climates. I find them noisy and they make the car feel very soft and floaty at higher speeds.

I’ve not used them in snow yet. I wouldn’t recommend them.

Edited by helix402 on Tuesday 8th August 23:11
I'm curious about your reasoning here. Assuming that these are pure 'winter' rims, wouldn't it make more sense to run a full winter tyre, rather than an all-season. Cross Climates are OK on snow, and pretty good at shifting water. But Pilot Alpins or Pirelli Sottozeros are much better in most cold / wet / snow / mud conditions, and presumably you'll have summer tyres on for the rest of the year?? If you're running one set of tyres all year, then all-seasons make sense, but I wouldn't use them if swapping summer / winter every year.

MDMA .

Original Poster:

9,215 posts

108 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies. Think I’ll get a set of 17” steels and run the 225/45/17 square set up.

d_a_n1979

9,680 posts

79 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
MDMA . said:
Thanks for the replies. Think I’ll get a set of 17” steels and run the 225/45/17 square set up.
Best way IMO

I've gone for Goodyear Vector 4Season Gen 3s this time around for my F31 in 235/45/18 flavour (via Asda Tyres of all places); they'll do perfectly for over the winter months and the road trips up to The Highlands and back etc. If I could have fitted 17s I would have done, but they won't clear the M Sport brakes

For winters on my previous cars; I've run Michelin Alpin A4s, Avon WV7s and Nexen Winguard Sport 2s as dedicated winters and they've all been superb and coped with cold, snowy weather as well as lots of rain etc. But for the limited mileage we do, dedicated winters aren't really needed, the Goodyear all-seasons will do perfectly




helix402

7,913 posts

189 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Magnum 475 said:
I'm curious about your reasoning here. Assuming that these are pure 'winter' rims, wouldn't it make more sense to run a full winter tyre, rather than an all-season. Cross Climates are OK on snow, and pretty good at shifting water. But Pilot Alpins or Pirelli Sottozeros are much better in most cold / wet / snow / mud conditions, and presumably you'll have summer tyres on for the rest of the year?? If you're running one set of tyres all year, then all-seasons make sense, but I wouldn't use them if swapping summer / winter every year.
The Cross Climates were used and cost around £1 with wheels. I agree entirely with your point and would have gone for full winters if the budget allowed.

d_a_n1979

9,680 posts

79 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Magnum 475 said:
helix402 said:
225/45/17 is the size to maintain the original radius in a 17”. I use this size with a set of 17” E9x alloys. Style 285. Re tyre choice I have non run flat Mich Cross Climates. I find them noisy and they make the car feel very soft and floaty at higher speeds.

I’ve not used them in snow yet. I wouldn’t recommend them.

Edited by helix402 on Tuesday 8th August 23:11
I'm curious about your reasoning here. Assuming that these are pure 'winter' rims, wouldn't it make more sense to run a full winter tyre, rather than an all-season. Cross Climates are OK on snow, and pretty good at shifting water. But Pilot Alpins or Pirelli Sottozeros are much better in most cold / wet / snow / mud conditions, and presumably you'll have summer tyres on for the rest of the year?? If you're running one set of tyres all year, then all-seasons make sense, but I wouldn't use them if swapping summer / winter every year.
Unless you live in the hills where you'll get more or less guaranteed bad weather/snow/hills etc... The all seasons will work perfectly fine...

They're still hell of a lot better than dedicated summers in the cold/wet conditions and even proper wintry weather...

MarkJS

1,719 posts

154 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
I ran a 17” square winter setup (Bridgestone Blizzak) on my E92 and now run a Staggered 18” winter setup (Continental WinterContact) on my F32. Can’t say I’ve experienced any real difference between square and staggered. Do be aware that because we don’t get proper, consistent winters in the UK (assuming you are there), winter tyres can be a liability when temperatures are upwards of around 7c. If it wasn’t for the patches of snow we get (or sometimes don’t!), I wouldn’t put winters in at all. But, they are a life saver when it does actually snow.

d_a_n1979

9,680 posts

79 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
MarkJS said:
I ran a 17” square winter setup (Bridgestone Blizzak) on my E92 and now run a Staggered 18” winter setup (Continental WinterContact) on my F32. Can’t say I’ve experienced any real difference between square and staggered. Do be aware that because we don’t get proper, consistent winters in the UK (assuming you are there), winter tyres can be a liability when temperatures are upwards of around 7c. If it wasn’t for the patches of snow we get (or sometimes don’t!), I wouldn’t put winters in at all. But, they are a life saver when it does actually snow.
Not just for snow; but for the cold wet weather we DO get every year...

For me, they're worth it just for that

MarkJS

1,719 posts

154 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
d_a_n1979 said:
MarkJS said:
I ran a 17” square winter setup (Bridgestone Blizzak) on my E92 and now run a Staggered 18” winter setup (Continental WinterContact) on my F32. Can’t say I’ve experienced any real difference between square and staggered. Do be aware that because we don’t get proper, consistent winters in the UK (assuming you are there), winter tyres can be a liability when temperatures are upwards of around 7c. If it wasn’t for the patches of snow we get (or sometimes don’t!), I wouldn’t put winters in at all. But, they are a life saver when it does actually snow.
Not just for snow; but for the cold wet weather we DO get every year...

For me, they're worth it just for that
Agree to an extent but my point is that it can -2c one day and +9c the next. It’s no fun entering a motorway slip road with the back end hanging out on the +9c day. We don’t get consistent temperatures so it’s something to be aware of in the UK.

Spuffington

1,238 posts

175 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
MarkJS said:
Do be aware that because we don’t get proper, consistent winters in the UK (assuming you are there), winter tyres can be a liability when temperatures are upwards of around 7c.
Not sure I would agree with that at all.

I've run winters all year around on several vehicles now and I've always marvelled how there hasn't been a big drop off in tyre performance when the tyres have been working in conditions of >25degs C.

I ran my 6.5t motorhome on Michelin Agilis Alpin all year round for 4yrs since I didn't want the hassle of running two sets of 6 wheels/tyres. That performed equally well in -26C in Austria as +40C in the South of France. I'm sure they wore a little quicker than running summers in summer but they still had 5.5mm 4yrs and 20k miles later.

I ran my F11 530d for a year almost exclusively on winters (Continental Winters) during my divorce when I didn't have any space for an extra set of wheels. No discernable difference in performance.

And we're currently running our F48 X1 on its winters still since the cold period lasted so long that I decided to leave them on in April when I'd normally change them and then general inertia has set in and haven't had a chance to get to the tyre hotel to get them swapped over. It's performed so well on them right up to 30+ degs C that there's been no reason to change them other than potential additional wear they're getting.

In terms of all seasons - I ran a set of Pirelli All Seasons on my MacanS and there was a noticeable difference between those and the Michelin summers it came on in terms of outright cornering performance. However, not to the point it would realistically trouble me on public roads. On my previous T6 California I popped Michelin CrossClimate2's on them and wasn't as impressed I was expecting to be. They were ok but had no-where near the grip of winters when the going got tough. Definitely better than summers, but not good enough when I needed them in all honesty.

For me, winters all year around would be preferable to all-year round tyres. In fact, I think when I replace the X1, I may just run whatever I get on winters going forwards. And I live in the traditionally temperate N Essex/South Cambs area.

In Germany the rule/advice is that if you can only afford/want to run one set of tyres all year around, they should be winters.

Edited by Spuffington on Thursday 10th August 13:13

MarkJS

1,719 posts

154 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
Spuffington said:
MarkJS said:
Do be aware that because we don’t get proper, consistent winters in the UK (assuming you are there), winter tyres can be a liability when temperatures are upwards of around 7c.
Not sure I would agree with that at all.

I've run winters all year around on several vehicles now and I've always marvelled how there hasn't been a big drop off in tyre performance when the tyres have been working in conditions of >25degs C.

I ran my 6.5t motorhome on Michelin Agilis Alpin all year round for 4yrs since I didn't want the hassle of running two sets of 6 wheels/tyres. That performed equally well in -26C in Austria as +40C in the South of France. I'm sure they wore a little quicker than running summers in summer but they still had 5.5mm 4yrs and 20k miles later.

I ran my F11 530d for a year almost exclusively on winters (Continental Winters) during my divorce when I didn't have any space for an extra set of wheels. No discernable difference in performance.

And we're currently running our F48 X1 on its winters still since the cold period lasted so long that I decided to leave them on in April when I'd normally change them and then general inertia has set in and haven't had a chance to get to the tyre hotel to get them swapped over. It's performed so well on them right up to 30+ degs C that there's been no reason to change them other than potential additional wear they're getting.

In terms of all seasons - I ran a set of Pirelli All Seasons on my MacanS and there was a noticeable difference between those and the Michelin summers it came on in terms of outright cornering performance. However, not to the point it would realistically trouble me on public roads. On my previous T6 California I popped Michelin CrossClimate2's on them and wasn't as impressed I was expecting to be. They were ok but had no-where near the grip of winters when the going got tough. Definitely better than summers, but not good enough when I needed them in all honesty.

For me, winters all year around would be preferable to all-year round tyres. In fact, I think when I replace the X1, I may just run whatever I get on winters going forwards. And I live in the traditionally temperate N Essex/South Cambs area.

In Germany the rule/advice is that if you can only afford/want to run one set of tyres all year around, they should be winters.

Edited by Spuffington on Thursday 10th August 13:13
Interesting. The noise alone makes me glad to put my summer wheels back on. I’ve briefly run winter tyres on an Opel Signum in temperatures between 22c & 30c and they’ve felt terrible. They also smelt quite a bit wink Just my experience.

The German rule is that you should have tyres fitted with winter properties for use in winter conditions - you can get all season tyres with ‘winter properties’ and use them without breaking any rules which would make sense to run all year round. Where I’ve lived in other parts of Europe, it is law to have full winter tyres fitted between specific dates.