oldeskewltoy wrote:
I'm a self confessed tire whore, and as I led into my first post... and no one has yet denied.... you have a 2600# projectile on about 4 square feet of contact patch... why have something less then ideal, or fully predictable????
I might sound like a smart ass - I am a smart ass - but I don't say this just to be a smart ass. So give me a second and try to follow what I'm trying to say.
Okay, I live in Denver. It snows here. I run snow tires, but lots of folks don't. So I kinda say the same type thing- "why do you compromise your safety with less than ideal tires"? So I get that. But truth is, most people do. So most drivers in Denver are on tires that are "less than ideal" for months at a time.
Does that make them a safety hazzard? Eh, not really.
But keep going with this for a second. LOADS of folks go to Big O when they need tires and say "what's the cheapest thing you have that will fit?" So they're always on tires that are "less than ideal". Are they a safety hazzard?
And how 'bout this- what if I buy an '86 Toyota Celica and drive it around. If I bought a '91 MR2 it would have more grip and better brakes. Am I a safety hazzard for the car I bought?
I drove by one of those brake places- they'll do your brakes for $60 or something. What kind of parts do you think they're using for that price? So that makes you car less than ideal. And that's the brakes! Personally I spare little expense there.
Shoot what about brake fluid? How many cars are driving around on 8 year old brake fluid. Most of us here probably know how much that degrades performance.
I hear what you're saying, but there are a LOT MORE dangerous things on the road than a decent car with a decent driver on mixed pairs of tires. If we wanted to make things 100% ideal all the time, we wouldn't have radios or cup holders in our cars.
If I had more time to think about this I would find a shorter way to say it that made me sound like less of an ass. Not attacking you, I just disagree with you. You're implying that it's irresponsible to do something that's just not that big a deal.
So let me say it clearly- for a daily driver that you use to get from here to there on a stock suspension that is a compromise from the factory, you are likely to be just as safe with mixed pairs as you would be on matched pairs, especially if the four matched tires are all cheaper. The driver's ability and attention is worth a TON more, assuming that we're talking about decent tires of the same general type, ie all season and all season.
Shoot, all season tires are a compromise. I don't run them.