Davanti Tyres

Davanti Tyres

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greenarrow

Original Poster:

3,867 posts

123 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
Seen these on a few cars recently and they were plugged by my tyre dealer. Has anyone put these on a BMW 3 series? Just wondering if they are good or bad. I can find very little information on them as they don't feature in the UK tyre tests, although there are customer reviews on Tyre Reviews which interestingly the Protoura Sport scores quite low for wet weather grip (58%) but the DX640, pretty decent at 71%. Reviews however seem quite extreme, either "Brilliantly grippy in all conditions" or "These tyres are lethal in the wet" !!!

So, interested to know if any fellow 3 series owners have any experience. I removed my OE RFTs in December and like the ride afforded by my chosen non RFT but that particular tyre has very soft sidewalls which for me has wrecked the handling somewhat, so I am weighing up what to do!!

d_a_n1979

9,414 posts

78 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
I know a few folk that ran Davanti tyres and then binned them ASAP; utter crap & certainly not ones I'd run on any car personally. Budget tyres...

You'd be better off with the likes of Uniroyal Rainsport5s, Nexen N'Fera SU1s, Falken & Kumho's as well

See what Camskill can offer (you just need to get them fitted locally)

G Thang

364 posts

34 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
Seen a lot of local independents pushing these as being good quality. I wondered why, my guess is a good markup.
Fairly expensive for budgets.

d_a_n1979

9,414 posts

78 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
G Thang said:
Seen a lot of local independents pushing these as being good quality. I wondered why, my guess is a good markup.
Fairly expensive for budgets.
They do round here too; those and Greenlane/Radar/Black Royal/Linglong/Accelera etc... Wouldn't touch any of them at all personally

E-bmw

9,817 posts

158 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
They are universally sh!t, the problem with online reviews is they are written by joe public, a lot of which wouldn't know a good tyre from a donut.

Hence why the reviews vary so much.

SlimJim16v

6,006 posts

149 months

Court_S

13,812 posts

183 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
They're absolutely terrible!

I had the joy of these on some loan wheels when mine were in for refurbishment...my car felt absolutely awful on them.

dhutch

15,035 posts

203 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
Pilot Sport 4's where always the go to PH tyre, do people not rate the PS5 in the same way?

We run Avon ZV7's on a couple of our cars and they appear a reasonable tyre.

Is it the Pirelli Cinturato P7 that I see as the OEM tyre on a lot of VAG cars?

Geffg

1,220 posts

111 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
Did you get your non runflat tyres with the load rating as XL? Years ago when I replaced mine on a 3 series I got the XL ones and they were ok. It was recommended rather than standard tyres.

greenarrow

Original Poster:

3,867 posts

123 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
Geffg said:
Did you get your non runflat tyres with the load rating as XL? Years ago when I replaced mine on a 3 series I got the XL ones and they were ok. It was recommended rather than standard tyres.
That's a good point, I think they aren't XL. Its my own fault really, have been using a different tyre dealer to support a local business who had given me good service when I got 2 front tyres on an Astra. I put on 4 Matadors whom tbh I hadnt heard of, but because they'd impressed me on the Astra thought would be ok. The BMW is a different beast however and because the sidewalls are so soft, the car just feels like a big blancmange now when you chuck it into a bend. Rides beautifully now and tbh the wet weather grip is pretty good, but the tyre just squidges under load. Having shelled out £410 for four I can't really afford to just ditch new tyres, but a drive to Cornwall yesterday made me so frustrated that I am starting to wonder.... Davantis came to mind as the garage also plug them but I think in truth they must be a dealer for these two tyre firms so it would be repeating the mistake!

I was going to go Falken or Kumho PS71 to start with and got persuaded otherwise. What an idiot I am!!!banghead

d_a_n1979

9,414 posts

78 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
greenarrow said:
Geffg said:
Did you get your non runflat tyres with the load rating as XL? Years ago when I replaced mine on a 3 series I got the XL ones and they were ok. It was recommended rather than standard tyres.
That's a good point, I think they aren't XL. Its my own fault really, have been using a different tyre dealer to support a local business who had given me good service when I got 2 front tyres on an Astra. I put on 4 Matadors whom tbh I hadnt heard of, but because they'd impressed me on the Astra thought would be ok. The BMW is a different beast however and because the sidewalls are so soft, the car just feels like a big blancmange now when you chuck it into a bend. Rides beautifully now and tbh the wet weather grip is pretty good, but the tyre just squidges under load. Having shelled out £410 for four I can't really afford to just ditch new tyres, but a drive to Cornwall yesterday made me so frustrated that I am starting to wonder.... Davantis came to mind as the garage also plug them but I think in truth they must be a dealer for these two tyre firms so it would be repeating the mistake!

I was going to go Falken or Kumho PS71 to start with and got persuaded otherwise. What an idiot I am!!!banghead
Put better tyres on and then sell them on eBay; someone will always buy them

Every time I've put my preference of rubber onto freshly refurbed wheels and the tyres I've taken off are still roadworthy; I've sold them on eBay with zero issues

mooseracer

2,050 posts

176 months

Monday 4th March
quotequote all
As said - they are awful
BMW kindly put them on my 140 when I bought it, they didn't stay on long.

Andy665

3,778 posts

234 months

Tuesday 5th March
quotequote all
E-bmw said:
They are universally sh!t, the problem with online reviews is they are written by joe public, a lot of which wouldn't know a good tyre from a donut.

Hence why the reviews vary so much.
Agreed but there are also a lot of "experts" who reckon that they can tell the difference in 1psi of pressure difference and are clearly tyre gods

Most people when mid-range and above would struggle to feel discernible differences between comparably priced tyres in 99% of normal driving situations

greenarrow

Original Poster:

3,867 posts

123 months

Tuesday 5th March
quotequote all
Whilst I have the attention of the BMW massive, reference was made to Michelin tyres earlier in this thread, so has anyone used PS4 or PS5s as a non run flat on their 3 series? I'm particularly interested in anyone running a higher profile tyre like mine, rather than rubber band tyres. Mine are 225/50/17.

d_a_n1979

9,414 posts

78 months

Tuesday 5th March
quotequote all
greenarrow said:
Whilst I have the attention of the BMW massive, reference was made to Michelin tyres earlier in this thread, so has anyone used PS4 or PS5s as a non run flat on their 3 series? I'm particularly interested in anyone running a higher profile tyre like mine, rather than rubber band tyres. Mine are 225/50/17.
Not on a 3 series; but PS4s on my Jap import 530i Sport touring - 235/45/17s

Absolutely superb tyres; great drive.smooth & quiet/great handling




Also running Goodyear all seasons and Assym6s in 235/45/18s on my F31 - again, superb tyres & very much the same as above

Court_S

13,812 posts

183 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
greenarrow said:
Whilst I have the attention of the BMW massive, reference was made to Michelin tyres earlier in this thread, so has anyone used PS4 or PS5s as a non run flat on their 3 series? I'm particularly interested in anyone running a higher profile tyre like mine, rather than rubber band tyres. Mine are 225/50/17.
I ran PS4’s on my 130i LE albeit on 18’s with fairly low profile tyres. I really rated them to be fair; I thought they were a bit better in the wet than the Good Years I’ve run on my 335i and my wife’s 330i.

Court_S

13,812 posts

183 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
Andy665 said:
Agreed but there are also a lot of "experts" who reckon that they can tell the difference in 1psi of pressure difference and are clearly tyre gods

Most people when mid-range and above would struggle to feel discernible differences between comparably priced tyres in 99% of normal driving situations
Re the mid range to high performance, that’s probably a fair comment. Certainly in road use, I can’t tell much difference between Kumho and Falken performance tyres versus the premium however the ditch finders were noticeably worse on the loan wheels I had.

Benmac

1,504 posts

222 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
I've been a tart for tyres for a good while and have run a second set of wheels with winters on for the daily cars for a number of years now. The difference between a decent tyre and a ditchfinder became very apparent to me last week.

My wife managed to burst one of the Cross climates I had on our 340i. I use them as "winters" as the vast majority of the time they're a better bet than full winters. This was "suboptimal" given I had sold the other set of wheels the day before as the day after I was trading the car in against an M340i. So, £255 for an emergency replacement ditchfinder later (FFS) and I was mobile again and could go and sell it (fessed up to the dealer, they weren't bothered as they were going to put new rubber on it anyway before retail).

So, up front two cross climates with decent tread. At the rear, on the right a decent but worn cross climate and on the left a brand new ditchfinder. I had a 200mile drive to go and get the new car and it was "interesting". The left rear would merrily spin up without much provocation and I was very aware of the lack of grip at the back end on roundabouts. To say I took it easy going through standing water on the motorway is an understatement.

Benmac

1,504 posts

222 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
I've been a tart for tyres for a good while and have run a second set of wheels with winters on for the daily cars for a number of years now. The difference between a decent tyre and a ditchfinder became very apparent to me last week.

My wife managed to burst one of the Cross climates I had on our 340i. I use them as "winters" as the vast majority of the time they're a better bet than full winters. This was "suboptimal" given I had sold the other set of wheels the day before as the day after I was trading the car in against an M340i. So, £255 for an emergency replacement ditchfinder later (FFS) and I was mobile again and could go and sell it (fessed up to the dealer, they weren't bothered as they were going to put new rubber on it anyway before retail).

So, up front two cross climates with decent tread. At the rear, on the right a decent but worn cross climate and on the left a brand new ditchfinder. I had a 200mile drive to go and get the new car and it was "interesting". The left rear would merrily spin up without much provocation and I was very aware of the lack of grip at the back end on roundabouts. To say I took it easy going through standing water on the motorway is an understatement.

d_a_n1979

9,414 posts

78 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
Benmac said:
I've been a tart for tyres for a good while and have run a second set of wheels with winters on for the daily cars for a number of years now. The difference between a decent tyre and a ditchfinder became very apparent to me last week.

My wife managed to burst one of the Cross climates I had on our 340i. I use them as "winters" as the vast majority of the time they're a better bet than full winters. This was "suboptimal" given I had sold the other set of wheels the day before as the day after I was trading the car in against an M340i. So, £255 for an emergency replacement ditchfinder later (FFS) and I was mobile again and could go and sell it (fessed up to the dealer, they weren't bothered as they were going to put new rubber on it anyway before retail).

So, up front two cross climates with decent tread. At the rear, on the right a decent but worn cross climate and on the left a brand new ditchfinder. I had a 200mile drive to go and get the new car and it was "interesting". The left rear would merrily spin up without much provocation and I was very aware of the lack of grip at the back end on roundabouts. To say I took it easy going through standing water on the motorway is an understatement.
Is that not more to do with 2 different tyres on the same axle; which is usually a no-no?

Agree that all-seasons are a good 'winter' alternative; the Goodyear Vector's I'm running have been great and went that route instead of dedicated winters this time around as even though we've had some snow here in Lancashire and a few cold spells; they're not long enough/cold enough for full blown winters. Even up to The Highlands they performed superbly