Wyn Davies
Member
Anyone got any I can beg/steal/borrow/buy? Missed a few sets on ebay. Can collect South Wales area, possibly Bristol/Gloucester over the Xmas Holls. Standard 255/55/19's.
Cheers
Cheers
Is that not just for non 4x4's? @mikescuba will probably know.The law in the Alpine regions of France apparently.......
Great looking Classic BTW.
The law in the Alpine regions of France apparently.......
So that's what the Swiss do when they are not melting down gold teeth.My son works in Switzerland. Once the clocks change in October you have to have snow tyres fitted and carry chains. Foreign cars likely to be stopped and checked so he has them.
A mud tread is completely different to a snow tire tread. A good mud tread has to be a bit knobbly and able to dig in and expel the mud. A snow grip has to have loads of small channels in the tire to expel water and snow and still keep a firm tread on the road which is completely different to a mud tire. .
I'd have thought that the Gendarmerie would had more important things to do than vehicle checks at the bottom of hills, and left such checks, if necessary, to the Police.I have M&S tyres on mine which are fine going uphill on normal roads when it snows. Terrifying coming downhill though. So I always carry a set of chains even though I've never been stopped by the gendarmes. If I remember correctly the law in France is that it's not a legal requirement to carry chains - it's just that if you cause an accident or get stuck through not having them then you're in trouble. So the Gendarmes at the bottom of the hill stop anyone they think might get into trouble when it snows. Happy to be corrected on that though.
The big giveaway is that all the French posties in the Alps run Panda 4x4s and Kangoo 4x4s.
I get around ok in winter on the standard summer tyres that are fitted.
I have M&S tyres on mine which are fine going uphill on normal roads when it snows. Terrifying coming downhill though which is why I always end up with a long tail of peed of locals behind me. So I always carry a set of chains even though I've never been stopped by the gendarmes. If I remember correctly the law in France is that it's not a legal requirement to carry chains - it's just that if you cause an accident or get stuck through not having them then you're in trouble. So the Gendarmes at the bottom of the hill stop anyone they think might get into trouble when it snows. Happy to be corrected on that though.
The big giveaway is that all the French posties in the Alps run Panda 4x4s and Kangoo 4x4s as mikescuba said.