fuck that - I will never live in a place that snows that much... we get a couple blizzards a year in down-state NY and the rest maybe 3"-6" deals... all-seasons are perfectly fine for it as long as you're careful. I will not buy another set of wheels to take up space year-round... and have to get them changed out twice a year... that shit's for the birds. That's why dedicated summer's are no good to me either.
I will not buy another set of wheels to take up space year-round... and have to get them changed out twice a year... that shit's for the birds. That's why dedicated summer's are no good to me either.
I'm a big believer of snow tires for those living in places that get decent snow.
i live in a place that gets decent snow.... travel occasionally to a place that gets more snow...
and my Bridgestone Dueler A/T Revo's work fine. Altho i do have a 4x4 SUV.
Those are off-road tires, like the snow plow trucks around here use. You can't compare them to normal passenger car all-seasons.
I've driven summer tires in the snow, and will NOT do that again. I've driven all-seasons in the snow and they were fine for the most part. My normal snow tires are Blizzak studless, and while they suck for pavement pounding, they absolutely rock for snow. I can go through foot deep snow, up inclines, avoid other vehicles. They feel surefooted in ways that all-seasons don't.
On a fwd like the G37 it's a close call since they got some power, it's up to you if the car is too much of a handful in the snow that you do get. Personally I hate fwd in the snow when the tires are subpar, the most extreme understeer ever.
Yeah, that's Murphy for ya 😛I had too much trouble with my Civic in snowstorms in Funny thing is I bought the winter tires, and then it never really snowed 🙁
This is just me, but if I had a nice new G37, and it only snowed 2-3 weeks a year, I'd look at picking up a cosmetically beat-up but mechanically decent 80s/90s Cherokee with the 4.0 V6. Wouldn't have to compromise on tires for the G, wouldn't have to put it at risk during the crappy weather, and you'd have a good runabout for whatever you needed, including a lot more cargo space. A lot of states let you get by with almost no insurance costs if it's listed as a recreational vehicle.
A set of wheels/decent tires for the G37 might not be very far away from the cost of an old Cherokee.
EDIT : This assumes you have the space for it 🙂 If you had to pay for extra parking/etc, f that.
My experiences were pretty much the same. Summer-only's suck once it hits about 45°F, much less when it snows. All-seasons are what I've always stuck with, and any cars I had that used summer-only were parked.
Exactly. My former neighbor across the street had an M3 sedan (family guy). Of course they come with summer tires. The entire winter it was parked in the same spot, never moved. After it snowed, it would sit there completely covered, still untouched... he wouldn't even clean that shit off, yet he would wash it religiously in the summer. What fun is it to drive a nice car everyday, then stop for months on end only to switch to his econobox Toyota, and still pay every month on that lease? If I were him I'd throw all-seasons on that thing. Do summer tires even do anything for local roads and highway driving?