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Comparative Performance of All Weather versus Winter Tires
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Testing the Benefits of Winter TiresBy Dan Edmunds | Published Dec 11, 2014
The vast majority of new cars sold in the U.S. come fitted with all-season tires. As the name implies, these tires
are designed to meet the basic needs of drivers in various climates across the country.
Because of this they must balance the need for sufficient dry and wet grip against the desire for low rolling
resistance in the interest of high fuel economy ratings. Most are also asked to be quiet, comfortable and
long-lasting. And for drivers who live where winters are harsh, they need to provide a passable level of grip in cold
weather and snow.
But Jack-of-All-Trades thinking seldom produces the best results in any single category. With this in mind we set
out to find out how much all-season tires might be giving up to dedicated winter tires in the face of frigid
conditions. Is seasonal tire-swapping the way to go? How big is the difference, anyway?
A Few Words About Tire Types
When most people think of winter tires, they think of aggressively treaded tires with metal studs in them. Such
tires exist, but they're designed for extreme conditions. For our test, we used non-studded winter tires. Not only
are they allowed on all roads (studded tires are often restricted), but a tire's tread pattern is not the only factor
that determines how well it works on snow and ice. The chemical formulation of the rubber and how it behaves at
low temperatures plays an equally vital role.
Snow tires utilize rubber compounds formulated to produce grip at low temperatures and feature a tread pattern
that's oriented to bite into snow. A network of razor-thin cuts called "sipes" further subdivides the tread blocks
into numerous gripping edges. The result is a squishier tread surface than you'll see on other tires.
Summer tires are better known as "high-performance" or "three-season" tires. Their tread comprises large solid
tread blocks with high lateral stiffness and no real sipes. Instead they have wide circumferential and swept-back
grooves made to expel and even sequester water, and their sticky warm-weather rubber formulation gets rock
hard at lower temperatures.
All-season tires contain elements of each. Their tread pattern consists of medium-size tread blocks that provide
some lateral stiffness along with a suggestion of biting edges. Sipes are present, but not in great numbers. And
they employ an intermediate rubber compound that stays compliant throughout a wider temperature range.
Test Setup
We shipped a collection of carefully selected tires to a winter proving ground operated by Automotive Enviro
Testing (AET) in northern Minnesota. But our intent was not to survey the mind-bogglingly huge tire aftermarket
and determine the single best winter tire. Instead we chose a single brand and compared products within its
lineup in order to see how much winter tires really help.
The choice of tire brand followed the choice of vehicle: the 2009 Honda Civic Si. We selected this car because it's
offered with a choice of summer or all-season original equipment tires in identical sizes. Today's 2015 Honda Civic
Si continues to be unique in this regard because optional summer performance tires are typically wider than their
all-season counterparts.
On our 2009 example, both tires were Michelins in size 215/45R17, the all-season Pilot HXMXM4 and the summer
Pilot Exalto PE2. Michelin also makes a winter tire in the same size, the Primacy Alpin PA3. Because of this, the
2009 Honda Civic Si allowed us to isolate the effects of tire type while holding the size and manufacturer variables
constant.
That said, many advocate narrower winter tires on a performance model like the Civic Si, the idea being that
skinnier tires bite into the snow more readily. So we ordered a second set of otherwise identical Primacy Alpin PA3
winter tires from Tirerack.com in size 205/55R16 to see if their modest 10mm (0.4-inch) reduction in tread width
made a measureable difference.
Why include summer tires? Because people travel and relocate. The sticky high-performance rubber that was ideal
in Florida will turn dangerous if you drive to the northern U.S. for the holidays or accept a job offer someplace
where they have a real winter. Our aim was to quantify this issue with comparable test results.
Test Runs
AET maintains a huge variety of test courses that automakers use to perform numerous winter-related tests that
go beyond tire performance. We focused on one of them: the groomed-snow Vehicle Dynamics Area (VDA). This
expansive surface allowed us to conduct our usual straight-line performance tests on snow.
The snow VDA is so vast there's not much to hit. And the uniform groomed surface made it possible for us to shift
our start and stop zones around for consistent conditions each time. All test passes were made with traction
control and ABS up and running. And each data point is the average of the middle three of five test runs.
We did make one other fundamental change to our routine: The acceleration and braking tests were capped at 40
mph instead of 60 mph. It's a more relevant test speed in wintry conditions and it's something of an industry
standard for this sort of work.
Snow Acceleration Results
The typical dry-weather acceleration run is a wide-open test of a car's maximum acceleration where the engine is
the star. But in winter conditions such limit tests become a real-world measure of how well the tires hook up when
you're simply trying to get moving after the stoplight turns green.
On its factory all-season tires, the Civic took 14.5 seconds to reach the modest speed of 40 mph. The same-size
winter tires improved the picture dramatically to 11.7 seconds and the skinnier winter tires brought it down to 11
seconds flat, an overall improvement of 24 percent relative to the standard all-season rubber.
And the summer performance tires? It's almost too sad to mention. It took them an excruciating 41.7 seconds to
coax the Civic up to 40 mph.
Snow Braking Results
Maybe you own an all-wheel-drive vehicle that gets going more readily than a front-drive machine like the Civic.
You'll still have to slow down, and in sloppy conditions the unexpected panic stop is far more commonplace.
Winter braking performance is crucially important to all vehicles, regardless of the number of wheels driving them
up to speed.
Here the all-season rubber stopped the Civic from 40 mph in 184 feet. The same-size Michelin snow tires did the
deed in 156 feet, a two-car-length advantage that could be the difference between stopping safely and
rear-ending someone. The skinnier version of these winter tires brought that down to 147 feet, some 37 feet and
20 percent shorter than the all-season originals.
As for the summer tires, they skated their way to a stop in a miserable 351 feet, almost double the distance
required by the all-season rubber. You simply do not want to get caught out on high-performance summer tires in
snow or frigid weather.
The Verdict
Winter tires made a big difference to the measured acceleration and braking performance of our Civic Si test
vehicle on a test-grade snow surface. Dedicated winter tires are the easiest performance and safety improvement
we can imagine from a simple bolt-on change that you buy and quite possibly even install by yourself in your
garage.
What's more, the slightly narrower version of the same tire accounted for a further measurable improvement that
may be worth pursuing if you're looking for maximum cold-weather performance.
All of the above is from the assumed starting point of all-season tires. Anyone who plans a holiday drive north or a
ski vacation into snow-covered mountains on summer performance tires needs to rethink their travel plans. And
those who relocate from warmer climes to a place where winter is no joke need to budget money for a set of
dedicated winter tires if their car doesn't at least have all-season tires.
Even if it does, the extra confidence and margin of error provided by winter tires will be a big help to those who
lack cold-weather driving experience. For that matter, even the most experienced winter drivers need the best
tires they can get.
© Edmunds Inc. All Rights Reserved. This information was extracted from www.edmunds.com and is subject tothe terms of the Visitor Agreement at http://www.edmunds.com/about/visitor-agreement.html.