[QUOTE=RogerB;39899][quote=amarv12;39441]I don't know. Maybe do some research on them.
I don't pretend i'm a racecar driver, I have absolutely no issues with grip on my daily commute.
You will wish you had racecar grip when you have to do an emergency stop.
You sound like one of my "It's just a Contour" friends.
Every car can benefit from better performing tires, but most people aren't willing to pay for them.
That said, I don't know how Yok did it, either, but this does appear to be a very nice tire--best in its category according to the TR site.
I think this is a little condescending. I've been running Yoko Avid V4s in 225/50/16 on a set of E1 rims on both my last Tour (a '95LX with BAT suspension) and my current one (a '97SE), and even though they're about $80 a pop compared to some much more expensive UHPs, they have yet to run out of grip before I ran out of nerve, and I've got a whole lot of nerve. About the only thing I don't do is track the car.
I have had these tires for probably four years now, and it's only been in the past few months that I've started noticing an increase in noise from them, and the wet grip has been reduced just enough for me to be more aware of driving carefully in the rain (or sliding around for fun). The Yokohama Avid line seems to be a really nice compromise between reasonable cost, longevity, and performance, so just try to keep from knocking them based on knee-jerk assumptions, please?
"Think of it, if you like, as a librarian with a G-string under the tweed." Clarkson on the Mondeo.
1997 SE V6/MTX
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