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Author Topic: Mid range tyre recomendation  (Read 12712 times)

Offline nathangallo

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Mid range tyre recomendation
« on: May 10, 2012, 06:32:31 pm »
Need to replace the rear two any time soon just wondering what you may recommend with a budget of around £60-£75 I bought two khumos for the front but I find them quite loud. So just seeing what is out there for my 18" monzas :)

Thanks

spankydan

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2012, 07:02:09 pm »
Falken FK452's IMO.

Not used them on a Golf but have used them on plenty of other vehicles. Try Camskill http://www.camskill.co.uk/

Offline neil86

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2012, 07:08:43 pm »
My falkens fk452 were horrendously noisey, although on my mates Leon no were near as bad.

Offline jedi-knight83

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2012, 07:14:02 pm »
I've got 235/23/19 Kumho KU39 on my van and they feel and sounds and grip well.

The reviews rated the Falkens a fair bit worse than the Kumho.

http://www.tyrereviews.co.uk/Tyre-Size/19-Inch-Tyres/235-35-19-Tyres.htm
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Offline nathangallo

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #4 on: May 10, 2012, 07:45:28 pm »
I think they are the khumos on mine apart from that they are a good tyre so I don't know wether to go for the, again and have all 4 matching or try something different and swap wheels so they are on the front. Tyre shop mentioned gt's if anybody has had experience with these?

Offline Sug

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #5 on: May 10, 2012, 08:33:57 pm »
Just fitted two new falkens to mine on the front 225/35/19 and there is a big difference with noise (louder) to the pirellis I had on previously apart from that grip seems fine
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Offline Ben Smith

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #6 on: May 10, 2012, 08:57:35 pm »
Tyres are my day job. There's loads of choice out there depending on your budget, but you really do get what you pay for. The 2 common complaints with the low profile, wide tyres most of us run are road noise and stepping (uneven wear usually on the inside). This is nearly always worse the cheaper the tyre. Unfortunately tyres seem to be something people cut costs on.

Nearly all of us are trying to make our cars quicker, better road holding in the corners and more importantly, under braking will do this without adding any bhp! Save the extra and get some premium rubber. :driver:

Offline Tamiyoman

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #7 on: May 10, 2012, 09:02:13 pm »
Toyo Proxes T1r, been usin them for around 6 years now, great Tyres and in 225/40/18 are about £98 corner from Camskill  :happy2:
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Offline Mk5 GTian

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #8 on: May 11, 2012, 04:48:54 am »

These tyres are going to be with you for around 20,000 miles, which is a lot of driving. For the sake of an extra 50 quid a corner you can get yourself in the best that Goodyear or Pirelli can offer, and make those miles so much sweeter.

Buying mid range tyres for a GTi is a bit like giving Yussain Bolt a pair of Reebok Classics!  :grin:

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Offline GrayMK5GTI

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #9 on: May 11, 2012, 07:49:47 am »

These tyres are going to be with you for around 20,000 miles, which is a lot of driving. For the sake of an extra 50 quid a corner you can get yourself in the best that Goodyear or Pirelli can offer, and make those miles so much sweeter.

Buying mid range tyres for a GTi is a bit like giving Yussain Bolt a pair of Reebok Classics!  :grin:

Nicely put!

I went from Dunlop Sport Maxx to Goodyear Eagle F1 Assy and the difference was AMAZING!  :happy2: So much quieter and you honestly cant even tell when the roads are wet. Transformed the car  :notworthy:
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Offline gazon69

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #10 on: May 11, 2012, 08:14:41 am »
Falken FK452's IMO.

Not used them on a Golf but have used them on plenty of other vehicles. Try Camskill http://www.camskill.co.uk/
452's are w4nk imo. Got them on now as a stop gap as i was desperate because my mate has to order decent tyres. As i said, i was desperate, will be going t1r's or f1 assys shortly

Offline monte

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #11 on: May 11, 2012, 08:46:10 am »
I bought some wheels once that came with nearly new Kuhmo's.
The Road noise was terrible!

I was 100% convinced I had a failed wheel bearing, when I put the Conti's on the noise disappeared!

Years ago I had Avon ZZ3 they were pretty good but they didn't last too long.

Toyo T1R's sound good to me  :happy2:

Offline monte

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #12 on: May 11, 2012, 08:53:18 am »
What about Uniroyal Rainsports?

Uniroyal were a massive brand in the past. Don't hear a right lot about em nowadays, but I'm sure they are still great tyres!

£92 a corner at camskill.  Id give em a try. Darren (MortyGtdi) buys these tyres. Ask him for an opinion!

http://www.camskill.co.uk/m61b0s134p60798/UNIROYAL_TYRES_CAR_UNIROYAL_RAINSPORT_2_UNIROYAL_RAIN_SPORT_2-_225_40R18_92Y_XL_FR_TL_

Offline Squeeguk

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #13 on: May 11, 2012, 08:54:14 am »

These tyres are going to be with you for around 20,000 miles, which is a lot of driving. For the sake of an extra 50 quid a corner you can get yourself in the best that Goodyear or Pirelli can offer, and make those miles so much sweeter.

Buying mid range tyres for a GTi is a bit like giving Yussain Bolt a pair of Reebok Classics!  :grin:

I totally agree. I can never understand people skimping on the only contact you have with the road???? They had the same thing on the M3 forums, which really did my head in. 2 Rears used to cost me around the £500 mark for that car and only lasted around 10k to 12.5k miles and you had people coming along and wanting to put £50 tyres on what is essentially a rear drive supercar???? :scared:

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Offline RedRobin

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Re: Mid range tyre recomendation
« Reply #14 on: May 11, 2012, 08:58:51 am »

Tyres are my day job. There's loads of choice out there depending on your budget, but you really do get what you pay for. The 2 common complaints with the low profile, wide tyres most of us run are road noise and stepping (uneven wear usually on the inside). This is nearly always worse the cheaper the tyre. Unfortunately tyres seem to be something people cut costs on.

Nearly all of us are trying to make our cars quicker, better road holding in the corners and more importantly, under braking will do this without adding any bhp! Save the extra and get some premium rubber.



These tyres are going to be with you for around 20,000 miles, which is a lot of driving. For the sake of an extra 50 quid a corner you can get yourself in the best that Goodyear or Pirelli can offer, and make those miles so much sweeter.

Buying mid range tyres for a GTi is a bit like giving Yussain Bolt a pair of Reebok Classics!  :grin:


^^^^ What they said!

Regardless of your car's performance each tyre has a contact area with the road surface which is only about the size of a CD. Do I need to point out anything further such as about braking, grip, and cornering? - It's all you have to rely on and worth being as safe as you possibly can.

To be fair, I have no experience of Falkens and Kuhmos but it's simply not a risk I'm prepared to take. I must assume that these tyres meet the specs to be valid for insurance.

And always fit new deeper tread tyres on the rear axle as Sticky Vicky explains (specially for Ian's pleasure):

http://www.etyres.co.uk/flashmovies/new-tyres-on-rear-800.html

On our FWD cars the tread will wear out more quickly on the front, so I buy just a pair of new tyres at a time and move the rear tyres to the front to make way for the new ones on the rear.

Having driven my GTI over 100,000 miles I find these the best allrounder for fast road use:



« Last Edit: May 11, 2012, 09:00:23 am by RedRobin »


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