Premium tyres on a boring car
Premium tyres on a boring car
Author
Discussion

Inposible

Original Poster:

11 posts

10 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Hi all,

Just looking to gauge thoughts on if it's worth getting premium tyres on a non performance car?

I currently have a 2017 Honda Jazz that I plan on keeping as long as possible and was considering switching to all season's and getting all Cross Climate 2's at £138 a corner.

I do about 10k miles a year and as a jazz driver obviously don't rag it about.

If I don't opt for the CC2s I'd just go with a cheaper Kumho at £100 a corner, so just wondering if the extra is worth it for the premium all seasons?

Thanks.

p4cks

7,197 posts

217 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
No - just get ditchfinders as they’re better value for money

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,597 posts

61 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
I don't believe in skimping on tyres, buy the best you can afford. The cc's will probably wear better than cheaper options working out not much more expensive in the long run.

Inbox

496 posts

4 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Well your tyres are the only thing holding you on the road so personally I would choose the Cross-Climates out of the two choices.

At the end of the day how you drive is only part of the equation, what others do on or near the roads and your reaction to that should also be considered.

How good will your emergency stop be?

Lincsls1

3,771 posts

158 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Tyres are the only thing keeping you on the road. Doesn't matter how good the brakes and other systems are if the tyres are ste.
I fit premium tyres to my basic lowly Astra, the Cross Climates actually.
As my daily, it is expected to deal with all weathers and conditions, so why would I skimp here.
Buy the best you can afford.

Vsix and Vtec

1,058 posts

36 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
I never go cheaper than Yokohama on anything I own. Even my boring old Focus 1.6 TDCi got half decent tyres. When the cost of a better tyre is so little, especially when split over the life of said tyre, versus the cost of it underperforming at a time I need it to be hook up, it really is an easy choice. Plus I have never owned a car I hated, and to my mind corner cutting just isn't cricket on something you like.

Inposible

Original Poster:

11 posts

10 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Thanks all.

Money isn't an issue as I'd rather spend on the tyres than a new car after a crash.

Cross climate 2s it is!

Rich Boy Spanner

1,716 posts

148 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
I always buy decent tyres irrespective of the car. They're the only things keeping you on the road.

wyson

3,791 posts

122 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
CC3 s are out, are they just not widely available yet / not made in yoursize?

Also Pirelli’s SF3 all seasons is rated better than CC2’s. The competition has caught up.

Edited by wyson on Monday 15th September 18:41

ThingsBehindTheSun

2,428 posts

49 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
I love seeing three year old cars for sale that have a pair of ditch finders on the front. I can only assume the first owner had to have them fitted and went for the cheapest option possible.

It's a nearly new car, why didn't you just replace them with what was already fitted to have a matching set? How much did it actually save you, £100 at most on a 2/3 year old car.

I just don't get it.

Inposible

Original Poster:

11 posts

10 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
wyson said:
CC3 s are out, are they just not widely available yet / not made in yoursize?

Also Pirelli s SF3 all seasons is rated better than CC2 s. The competition has caught up.

Edited by wyson on Monday 15th September 18:41
Can't get either of those in my size unfortunately.

TA14

13,317 posts

276 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Inposible said:
Thanks all.

Money isn't an issue as I'd rather spend on the tyres than a new car after a crash.

Cross climate 2s it is!
I used to run Alpins in the winter and PS4s in the summer. I've recently sold my Honda and ran that on CC2s for the last three or four years and found it a good compromise.

ChocolateFrog

32,723 posts

191 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Definitely worth it IMO.

It's not much money in the grand scheme of things and if they save you once in the few years they'll last then they've paid you back many times over.


GeniusOfLove

4,111 posts

30 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
My £250 1997 XJ6 has a full set of new CC2s on it....

I've driven enough st cars with dire tyres fitted by skinflint owners to know it can render any car awful to drive and outright dangerous if they're really bad. Had a few huge slides at walking speed from no name tyres, the crap ones now seem even crapper than ditchfinders used to be.

Mid range (Kumho etc) upwards are all pretty great now, good enough for any normal car, not worth using the real miser stuff.

stevieturbo

17,844 posts

265 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Inposible said:
Hi all,

Just looking to gauge thoughts on if it's worth getting premium tyres on a non performance car?

I currently have a 2017 Honda Jazz that I plan on keeping as long as possible and was considering switching to all season's and getting all Cross Climate 2's at £138 a corner.

I do about 10k miles a year and as a jazz driver obviously don't rag it about.

If I don't opt for the CC2s I'd just go with a cheaper Kumho at £100 a corner, so just wondering if the extra is worth it for the premium all seasons?

Thanks.
What environment do you drive in ? What are winters like where you are ?

Pica-Pica

15,420 posts

102 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Always the best tyres for the road and weather conditions you will experience, whatever car.

Mr Tidy

27,629 posts

145 months

Monday 15th September
quotequote all
Kumho are fine, I've had them on one of my cars for over 4 years and never found them lacking in grip or performance. But depending where you live CCs might be a good idea for all year usability for not much more cost.

I don't use that car in the winter as I have a daily driver that gets full winters every year, although swapping wheels is a PITA.


otolith

62,773 posts

222 months

Tuesday 16th September
quotequote all
ThingsBehindTheSun said:
I love seeing three year old cars for sale that have a pair of ditch finders on the front. I can only assume the first owner had to have them fitted and went for the cheapest option possible.

It's a nearly new car, why didn't you just replace them with what was already fitted to have a matching set? How much did it actually save you, £100 at most on a 2/3 year old car.

I just don't get it.
If they’re on dealer forecourts that’s who probably chucked the worn out originals and slung on a pair of the cheapest things they could get.

Inposible

Original Poster:

11 posts

10 months

Tuesday 16th September
quotequote all
stevieturbo said:
What environment do you drive in ? What are winters like where you are ?
North east so snowy haha

stevieturbo

17,844 posts

265 months

Tuesday 16th September
quotequote all
Inposible said:
North east so snowy haha
Then yes, CC2's can make a lot of sense.