Proper Winter Tyres. Urgent advice Required!

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Yes please give me details of tyres I can fit and then drive like a complete **** without crashing

p.s. Please note I will quote your recommendation and try to get compensation from you after the inevitable accident

Ta

Regards :rolleyes:

Ere you go;););););)

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Good luck with the compensation though, I iz skint:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:
 
your not going fast enough...no heat in your tyresm haha, jk....happens to the best of us mate, difference being we have the power to get back out the fields on our own, just take it on the chin
 
Typed a big long speil but its seems to have not worked, it was my first post so not sure what I did wrong.

I have run winter tyres on a lot of different vehicles over the last 20 years. Some of my conclusions:

Cars handle better on roads than high 4x4's what ever the weather.
Best car ive ever driven in snow was a 51 plate Polo 1.9 SDi with steel wheels and winter tyres, fast, predictable and fun.

2009 Caravelle with 4 winters was unbelieveable aswell but due to cost I took it a little easier than the Polo as I was scared Id prang it.

Ive had a Nissan Pathfinder with BF Goodrich All Terrain T/A's it was fine but scary on the bends if you went in too fast, the weight would drift it with ease.
Volvo XC90 was good ish with 4 winters but you can feel the AWD system and it just doesnt seem as planted I prefer proper 4x4 systems.

Took delivery of my new defender yesterday 2004 110 CSW, sitting on new General Grabbers. I feel like it will go anywhere but I certainly wont be throwing it around like I did with the Polo on the back roads.

I have a Defender because I have 3 kids, we go hill walking so are in remote places with ****y carparks, we tow a caravan and a big trailer because I collect and cut my own logs etc and often end up in some pretty messy terrain which wouldnt be suitable for a car. I certainly wouldnt choose a big 4x4 for road driving for any season they are a lot harder to drive than small cars with winters, especially with heavy diesel engines upfront over a set of winter tyres.

I used to take my Polo through terrible snow conditions to get to Braemar to go walking, there was no need for a 4x4 if you werent going off road.

Cheers
 
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Typed a big long speil but its seems to have not worked, it was my first post so not sure what I did wrong.


:confused2:

I have run winter tyres on a lot of different vehicles over the last 20 years. Some of my conclusions:


Cars handle better on roads than high 4x4's what ever the weather.


Hmm only where a lighter vehicle has the advantage but I take your point

Best car ive ever driven in snow was a 51 plate Polo 1.9 SDi with steel wheels and winter tyres, fast, predictable and fun.

2009 Caravelle with 4 winters was unbelieveable aswell but due to cost I took it a little easier than the Polo as I was scared Id prang it.

Ive had a Nissan Pathfinder with BF Goodrich All Terrain T/A's it was fine but scary on the bends if you went in too fast, the weight would drift it with ease.
Volvo XC90 was good ish with 4 winters but you can feel the AWD system and it just doesnt seem as planted I prefer proper 4x4 systems.

Fairy Nuff :D


Took delivery of my new defender yesterday 2004 110 CSW, sitting on new General Grabbers.



:nopics:

I feel like it will go anywhere but I certainly wont be throwing it around like I did with the Polo on the back roads.


Thank god for that cos it's nearly twice as heavy ;)

I have a Defender because I have 3 kids, we go hill walking so are in remote places with ****y carparks, we tow a caravan and a big trailer because I collect and cut my own logs etc and often end up in some pretty messy terrain which wouldnt be suitable for a car. I certainly wouldnt choose a big 4x4 for road driving for any season they are a lot harder to drive than small cars with winters, especially with heavy diesel engines upfront over a set of winter tyres.


You dont need to justify having a Landy on here ;)

I used to take my Polo through terrible snow conditions to get to Braemar to go walking, there was no need for a 4x4 if you werent going off road.

Cheers

Quite right, with the right attitude and correct aptitude winter driving is easy and fun :D

:welcome2:
 
Hi. A funny thing happened to me a couple of days ago.
It was the first properly cold day we’ve had and I was on my way to work, I decided to use the quiet back roads cos I have a lovely 110 utility wagon, I’ve been told they can go anywhere. Unfortunately there was a little tiny bit of ice on a gentle S bend, which I approached at about 20MPH. Can you see where this is going, I could see where it was going, straight through the hedge, regardless what I did with the steering wheel.
Before you criticise my driving I honestly wasn’t going fast, I know this because I was able to shout ‘F$^%ing Hell’ 3 times before I hit the hedge.
My tyres are virtually new General Grabber TR 235 85 16 on alloys with only 2k miles use on them. They are badged Mud+Snow but they are obviously not a winter compound, and I have no faith in the tyres any more, they have to go or the car has to go (now devalued by hedge damage).
I have had a hunt on the tinterweb and I was stunned to find there are no proper winter tyres in this size!!!!!!!!!
What to do? I beg for proper advice, although I imagine there’s going to be a bit of P taking and people advising me to drop the tyre pressure and learn to drive. I drive 99.99999% on road and don’t require anything too knobbly.
On a separate note: does anyone want to buy a set of 4 or 5 very nearly new G Grabber TR’s?
Try Yokohama Geolander I/T 235/80R16, slightly lower profile but they're proper Winter Tyres with the all important Snowflake.
 
I'm pretty new to this forum but bloody hell!

"I slipped on ice"
"Should I sell my Defender and buy a Fiesta?"
"My postman's Kangoo van is better in snow than a Defender"
"I can't find winter tyres in my size"
"People are being beastly to me"

Man up fella for f*ck's sake!

You've got a Land Rover Defender which will take you further than almost any vehicle ever made. It will pull wagons up snowy banks and ford deep water, it will plough through mud and climb up rock steps.
The Police use them, the Fire Brigade use them, most armed forces use them because they are a tool. They do what they are supposed to do.

The weakest part of any machine is the organic wobbly bit behind the wheel and that is the same in your Defender.
Don't change your tyres every time the f*cking weather changes, learn to drive to the conditions or failing that buy the Fiesta and go and whine on like a pre-pubescent tart to the Ford Forum.
 
I'm pretty new to this forum but bloody hell!

"I slipped on ice"
"Should I sell my Defender and buy a Fiesta?"
"My postman's Kangoo van is better in snow than a Defender"
"I can't find winter tyres in my size"
"People are being beastly to me"

Man up fella for f*ck's sake!

You've got a Land Rover Defender which will take you further than almost any vehicle ever made. It will pull wagons up snowy banks and ford deep water, it will plough through mud and climb up rock steps.
The Police use them, the Fire Brigade use them, most armed forces use them because they are a tool. They do what they are supposed to do.

The weakest part of any machine is the organic wobbly bit behind the wheel and that is the same in your Defender.
Don't change your tyres every time the f*cking weather changes, learn to drive to the conditions or failing that buy the Fiesta and go and whine on like a pre-pubescent tart to the Ford Forum.


Might be new to the forum, but a good line in invective:tea::tea:
 
I'm pretty new to this forum but bloody hell!

"I slipped on ice"
"Should I sell my Defender and buy a Fiesta?"
"My postman's Kangoo van is better in snow than a Defender"
"I can't find winter tyres in my size"
"People are being beastly to me"

Man up fella for f*ck's sake!

You've got a Land Rover Defender which will take you further than almost any vehicle ever made. It will pull wagons up snowy banks and ford deep water, it will plough through mud and climb up rock steps.
The Police use them, the Fire Brigade use them, most armed forces use them because they are a tool. They do what they are supposed to do.

The weakest part of any machine is the organic wobbly bit behind the wheel and that is the same in your Defender.
Don't change your tyres every time the f*cking weather changes, learn to drive to the conditions or failing that buy the Fiesta and go and whine on like a pre-pubescent tart to the Ford Forum.

Fitting in perfectly I'd say :D :D :D
 
The weakest part of any machine is the organic wobbly bit behind the wheel and that is the same in your Defender.
Don't change your tyres every time the f*cking weather changes

I do, Winter Tyres on the Landy when there's ice/snow on the ground, extreme Muds for off-road. No way would I want to be driving on ice with the MUDs on.

I change both of my road cars tyres between Summer and Winter tyres every year. Until you've tried it don't knock it.
A Ford Fiesta will go further with Winter Tyres on ice than a Defender on Muds and be a lot safer.
Know your vehicle's limitations.
 
I do, Winter Tyres on the Landy when there's ice/snow on the ground, extreme Muds for off-road. No way would I want to be driving on ice with the MUDs on.

I change both of my road cars tyres between Summer and Winter tyres every year. Until you've tried it don't knock it.
A Ford Fiesta will go further with Winter Tyres on ice than a Defender on Muds and be a lot safer.
Know your vehicle's limitations.

Your right. BUT

Not everyone can afford two sets of tyres. Whether they should or not is irrelevant.







If you decide you cant afford two sets of tyres, All-terrain's are IMHO the best you can do.

Please dont tell folk that just because they have fitted snow tyres they can still drive like they do on a dry summer's day. There are enough tits on the road who think they're immortal cos they drive a 4x4 as it is :rolleyes:

I would add Know your vehicles limitations........... and your own ;)
 
We have a fleet of vw caddys some have winter tyres some don't but you can really notice the difference, I used to think winter tyres were a waste of time but since comparing the two I believe in them more, on the other hand my 90 had at's on last year and it was fine in the snow but I now have big MUDs and it's not so good in the snow but it's better in the mud, so what do I do change tyres for every occasion? No just drive to suit the tyres it's much easier and cheaper
 
Learn to drive with the skids, happens to us all. Heavy vehicle, slippery conditions, Hugh road clearance...all adds to it. You probably should have driven through into the field and gone greenlaning!
 
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