Tires...can you mix
Hi,
I need new all season tires on the rear. I presently have stock OEM conti's. The front conti's have plenty of rubber on them...so I only need rear tires.
I was considering either staying with the conti's for the rears...or going with the Goodyear F1's. I have heard so good reviews on this forum about the F1's...and would welcome a quieter tire also.
Has anyone had any experience with conti's on front and goodyear f1's on rears? If so...How does the car handle ( I have a roadster ltd) ?
Is it a bad idea to mix tires...that is front and rear wih different tread designs?
Your comments and suggestions would be appreciates
I need new all season tires on the rear. I presently have stock OEM conti's. The front conti's have plenty of rubber on them...so I only need rear tires.
I was considering either staying with the conti's for the rears...or going with the Goodyear F1's. I have heard so good reviews on this forum about the F1's...and would welcome a quieter tire also.
Has anyone had any experience with conti's on front and goodyear f1's on rears? If so...How does the car handle ( I have a roadster ltd) ?
Is it a bad idea to mix tires...that is front and rear wih different tread designs?
Your comments and suggestions would be appreciates
I see a lot of the guys mixing tires...just got back from the Woodward Dream Cruise and noticed this as well...I am getting ready to go to F1's and like you, my fronts have plenty of tread left, but I am upsizing for my needs...so I am going for all four...it wouldn't hurt a thing IMO to mix them..
I replaced the rears on my Limited Roadster about 3,000 miles ago.
The fronts, like yours, are the original Conti all season tires with a good amount of tread left on them.
I have noticed no adverse result with the Goodyear F1 tires on the rear.
Like a few others, I also noticed an increase in mpg with the Goodyear F1 tires.
The fronts, like yours, are the original Conti all season tires with a good amount of tread left on them.
I have noticed no adverse result with the Goodyear F1 tires on the rear.
Like a few others, I also noticed an increase in mpg with the Goodyear F1 tires.
Are the Goodyear F1s a summer or an all-season tire?
I've got plenty of tread fore and aft even after 30k miles, but I'll probably have to replace tires next summer. I only drive during the summer, so good grip, tire wear and gas mileage (often mutually exclusive) are important to me.
I've got plenty of tread fore and aft even after 30k miles, but I'll probably have to replace tires next summer. I only drive during the summer, so good grip, tire wear and gas mileage (often mutually exclusive) are important to me.
Originally Posted by BRappaport
Hi,
I need new all season tires on the rear. I presently have stock OEM conti's. The front conti's have plenty of rubber on them...so I only need rear tires.
I was considering either staying with the conti's for the rears...or going with the Goodyear F1's. I have heard so good reviews on this forum about the F1's...and would welcome a quieter tire also.
Has anyone had any experience with conti's on front and goodyear f1's on rears? If so...How does the car handle ( I have a roadster ltd) ?
Is it a bad idea to mix tires...that is front and rear wih different tread designs?
Your comments and suggestions would be appreciates
I need new all season tires on the rear. I presently have stock OEM conti's. The front conti's have plenty of rubber on them...so I only need rear tires.
I was considering either staying with the conti's for the rears...or going with the Goodyear F1's. I have heard so good reviews on this forum about the F1's...and would welcome a quieter tire also.
Has anyone had any experience with conti's on front and goodyear f1's on rears? If so...How does the car handle ( I have a roadster ltd) ?
Is it a bad idea to mix tires...that is front and rear wih different tread designs?
Your comments and suggestions would be appreciates
In other words, think of it this way. Since you have older, different tires on the front, and newer tires on the rear, the front of your car and the rear are now handling even more differently from each other than they should be. This MAY cause unpredictable, unexpected, or unwanted control and traction problems.
However, you can mix and match without having much trouble. Just remember, the manufacturer that made the tires that are on the rear of your car made them to work with the same brand, type, and model that should be on the front.
As a rule, I try to always buy matching sets of 4. Safer bet.
If it makes any difference, I run autocross with my Crossfire with the SCCA, and have with some other previous cars. We know that if you don't have a good set of tires, doesn't matter how much horsepower, what kind of suspension you have, how light your car is, or how good of a driver you are- a bad set of tires can ruin everything.
Btw, just a word of advice. I wouldn't go with the Goodyears. I've heard bad things about them actually. Check out Tirerack.com and read ALL of the reviews. There's a lot of complaints about ride quality, tread wear, and noise.
Last edited by shapeshifter309; Sep 2, 2008 at 06:33 PM.
You can mix if you have the same two tyres on front and same two on back, although keeping the same tyres all round is better for the traction, smoothness of drive, road noise control and general performance.
I have all four michelin pilot 2 sports on my xfire, the traction is awesome, the road noise is super-minimal and i get a really smooth ride! the only downfall is they cost £250 each :/
I have all four michelin pilot 2 sports on my xfire, the traction is awesome, the road noise is super-minimal and i get a really smooth ride! the only downfall is they cost £250 each :/
Last edited by Nezek; Sep 2, 2008 at 02:12 PM.
Originally Posted by Nezek
You can mix if you have the same two tyres on front and same two on back, although keeping the same tyres all round is better for the traction, smoothness of drive, road noise control and general performance.
I have all four michelin pilot 2 sports on my xfire, the traction is awesome, the road noise is super-minimal and i get a really smooth ride! the only downfall is they cost £250 each :/
I have all four michelin pilot 2 sports on my xfire, the traction is awesome, the road noise is super-minimal and i get a really smooth ride! the only downfall is they cost £250 each :/
Originally Posted by BRappaport
Nezek...These sound great....but...Are these Michelin's considered "All Season Tires". That is what I am looking for. Thanks
The Michelins are summer tires. You do not want to put summer tires on the back with all-weather tires on the front. Since summer tires track much faster than A/W tires you could end up sliding the car off the road. I recommend you call the experts at Tire Rack and ask them which way you should go.There arn't many A/W tires in our size but the best are Yokohama advan 4s. Great grip and smooth ride. Again, please don't take my word or any one elses, find out from the experts. Good luck and enjoy your new tires.
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