Given
82%
while driving a
Alfa Romeo
(235/45 R18 W) on
mostly motorways
for 22
easy going miles
Firstly, I drive an Alfa Romeo 159 Estate, a lump of a car weighing in at 1,800kg with a full tank of fuel, and these cars are famed for munching through tires, regardless of the wheel option.
I fitted these tires soon after buying the car in March 2014, because they were reasonably priced from a fairly unkown website - and they HAD to be better than the 3 Nankangs and a Sunny when I bought the car, right?
When new, the tires were VERY grippy, ranging from dry, to soaking wet, and even that rubbish greasy stuff in between. I managed a full snowy (ish) winter in them without getting stuck once. Very impressed indeed!
I had swapped them over front-to-rear at about 10,000 to keep their tread wear roughly even. A cursory glance at the tires revealed they had about 5mm left all round. chuffed!
After the first year drove past, these tires had about 15,000 miles on them, and were starting to show their age. They started tramlining VERY slightly (only noticeable when the road surface was at its worst) and the noise was slowly getting worse.
Finally, this week, after 18 months and 22,500 miles I threw in the towel, my MoT was due and with slightly less than 2.5mm on each corner, I didn't fancy a full set of advisories so I changed them out for a different tire.
Honestly, it was the final few months of wear that convinced me to go elsewhere, the 'white-noise' on rough surfaces annoyed me (I drive mostly dual carriageways) and the tramlining gets worse with the tread wear.
Their price at the tire size I have (235/45 18) makes them a very attractive mid-range alternative to the 'big name' brands - and if my new set of GoodYear Eagle asymmetrics don't stand up, I will definitely be going back to them.
In summary of an essay-style review, A very good mid-range tire let down only by the degredation in the final stages of tread wear. wholeheartly recommend for a relaxed, steady, high-mileage driving style.