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No, but most of my journeys are short and in town,

 

When I first started driving, my father was a bit concerned that I hadn't bought any snow chains. I've never seen anyone using snow chains in the Gloucester area. My father never drove and he was probably basing his views on the time back in the 1930s when he was in a car with his boss on a journey from Gloucester to London in the depths of winter. Every few miles on the journey he was told by his boss to get out of the car and to clear the snow away from the windscreen (windscreen wipers were frozen solid so useless). My father worked in a solicitors office and they had to go to London to attend a court case. When they got to London they waited for a couple of hours only to be told that the case had been delayed because of the weather, so they then came back to Gloucester.

El Loro

I have tyre paranoia....  and would love to be able to afford/justify changing to winter tyres.... 

 

my paranoia stems back to a near death experience, aquaplaning across a busy A road only managing to get back control of the car & turn with the nose of my car literally cm's from the side barricade bit of the road...  

 

anyways...  turned out my father (who had helped me out getting my car through MOT earlier in the year) had taken the recommendation of the mechanic and got me cheap KDF tyres (KDF = Korean Ditch Finders   my brothers name for them) and they were crap.

 

Got nice branded tyres now 

 

and I make sure I stay under 60 mph in the wet 

Dirtyprettygirlthing
Originally Posted by Saint:

There are definitely good and bad tyres but ...

 

The prblems i'm having with my current car has to be due to tyre width and its contact with the road.

My skinny tyred Corolla went everywhere - never slid around.

My fat tyred Laguna is like a death trap no matter wot tyres I fit

My now departed dad used to say "let the tyres down a little when driving on snow" 

Dunno if thats good or bad advice cause I dont drive but he never had an accident in more that 50 years of driving..

Moonie
Originally Posted by Saint:

There are definitely good and bad tyres but ...

 

The prblems i'm having with my current car has to be due to tyre width and its contact with the road.

My skinny tyred Corolla went everywhere - never slid around.

My fat tyred Laguna is like a death trap no matter wot tyres I fit

Sainty, is your Corolla a rear-wheel drive? We had a Ford Sierra which was and it skidded about all over the place. Front-wheel drives are better in the snow.

Yogi19
Originally Posted by Yogi19:
Originally Posted by Saint:

There are definitely good and bad tyres but ...

 

The prblems i'm having with my current car has to be due to tyre width and its contact with the road.

My skinny tyred Corolla went everywhere - never slid around.

My fat tyred Laguna is like a death trap no matter wot tyres I fit

Sainty, is your Corolla a rear-wheel drive? We had a Ford Sierra which was and it skidded about all over the place. Front-wheel drives are better in the snow.

Front wheel Yogi - i miss it - it was soooo sure footed even on remoulds

Saint
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Saint:
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Saint:

They are rubbish, they  rip and fall apart after a use.

Have you used them Jackson?

No, my mate bought some, and he used them, they lasted about 3 days, so I kept  my cash in my wallet., they cost him some thing like ÂĢ90!

If they are used incorrectly  - as in driving on clear tarmac between snowed up areas - it can cause them to shred.

If driven over 50mph it can cause the same

Saint

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