Materials to Maintain Your ZHP IIIII Hand Protection IIIII Tools to Maintain Your ZHP
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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    Portland, OR
    Posts
    10,242

    Need to replace tires in the near future, what should I look at?

    My old Continental ExtremeContact DW tires are reaching their final form (racing slicks), so it's probably time to replace them to reduce the minuscule risk of hydroplaning off a bridge from a 1mm puddle. In Portland. In the very dry winter.

    Where was I? Oh right, tires. I've enjoyed my Contis, but my ham-fisted approach to driving wrung the life out of them in ~25k miles despite rotating tires regularly, so I am open to new suggestions. I'm currently eyeing the following and would appreciate any personal experience on performance (wet, dry, cold, hot), road noise, and value:

    Michelin Pilot Sport 4S - the gold standard, but boy howdy are they eye-wateringly expensive ($880 shipped for 245/40R17s)
    Continental ExtremeContact Sport - The replacement for my current tire
    Something from Cooper? @ZHPizza

    I only have personal experience with Bridgestone, Continental, and Pirelli, and Pirelli's best offering doesn't come in my preferred tire size, so I'm open to suggestions.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Location
    Leesburg, VA
    Posts
    1,208
    I'd think you'd enjoy any of the top 10 in the Max Summer category - https://www.tirerack.com/tires/surve...ay.jsp?type=MP
    I run Bridgestone Potenza S-03 Pole Position on my 2002tii & Dunlop SP Sport Maxx on the E28 535i spring through fall, but neither are daily drivers.
    2006 330ci ZHP - Silbergrau Metallic / Stoff Laser/Anthrazit / Alu Black Cube trim / Adaptive Xenon headlights / HK hi-fi system / heated front seats

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Location
    Indianapolis, IN
    Posts
    62
    Firestone Firehawk Indy 500

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2019
    Location
    Raleigh, NC
    Posts
    879
    Quote Originally Posted by Hoonin88 View Post
    Firestone Firehawk Indy 500
    I second this. I'm on my third set right now. Not because they wear out quickly but because I think they offer unbeatable value. They are in the same category and TW rating as your DW, so they perform similarly and should last just as long. The most I ever got out of a set was 15k miles, but that's on a staggered setup with no rotation and as ZHPizza would say, "I like to party."

    Generally, they have enough grip to be fun in the corners and maybe the occasional autocross. I find they perform best at 34psi when warm. PS4S will offer more grip, but you've seen the price you pay for that. Where the Indy 500s really shine though is in the (warm) rain. At dry autocross events they are clearly outclassed and nowhere near competitive, but when it starts pouring I'm always able to close the gap to S2ks with RE-71s, sometimes even surpassing them. I've also driven through pretty heavy storms in Louisiana where it just absolutely pours without ever hydroplaning.
    330i Base | Mysticblau | Slicktop | 6MT

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    Charlotte, NC
    Posts
    3,130
    Ooh boy time for a tire measuring contest. Here's my thoughts on the two rubbers that I'm currently using on my red rocket:

    Cooper RS3-G1 (hella grippy all season)
    - Can't beat the versatility for the dollary doos
    - Ride smooth and quiet like a touring tire
    - 45k mi warranty but this car spends too much time sideways for that to matter
    - Dry traction is great for an all season tire. I did some laps on the track with @704sw in the car and he was like "bro these Coopers ain't bad bro let's do brunch bro"
    - Wet traction is phenomenal. It's flooding in Charlotte today so I used this post as an excuse to turn off traction control and do some raining-buckets-hooning (for science). Car felt like it was glued to the road through inches of water. Running through deep puddles was no problem -- felt like splash mountain but didn't even pull the wheel.
    - Good in all temperatures. I've run in light snow a few times and was fine. Can't compare to snow tires because I've never lived in a place where you need snow tires and I don't know why anyone would.
    - Since they're so cheap, they make hooning a low cost activity
    - a set of 245/40r18's ran me $362 after rebates lol

    Michelin P$4$ (super duper grippy summer tire)
    - Fricken phenomenal grip and a breakaway point that is predictable. I got these because the Coopers, while they did better than expected on the track, didn't instill confidence that they weren't about to break free. The PS4S has a ton of grip and you can feel/hear them building up to the point of a slide. They were perfect for my scenario where I wanted to run one tire April-November that was safe/comfortable on the street and inspired confidence on the autox course/track.
    - Ride smooth & quiet - probably the most comfortable max performance tire out there
    - NOT functional in temperatures <40F. It's like riding on wood planks. Don't do it.
    - Cost twice as much as the Coops, but gd are they dope tires
    - a set of 255/35r18's ran me $806 after rebates

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    Charlotte, NC
    Posts
    3,130
    Quote Originally Posted by Galapolis View Post
    as ZHPizza would say, "I like to party."
    hell yeah

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    588
    I've always been a Michelin fan--loving their grippy performance--but I've been running Toyo Proxes 4 Plus and Toyo Celsius on my daily drivers (only Michelin PSS's will do on my garage queen ZHP), and I am quite impressed. In my fairly extensive experience, Michelins suck when it comes to durability, but these Toyos seem to be lasting forever, perform pretty well, and are inexpensive (especially if you catch a sale). Something to consider...
    2004 BMW 330i ZHP (52k miles), Jet Black with black leather, MFactory LSD (3.38) with Z4 cover, 18"x8.5" ET38 APEX Arc-8's (Anthracite) with 245/40 Michelin PSS', Koni Sports with factory springs and front and rear reinforcement plates, Shark Injector, Corsa TSE3 cat-back exhaust, TMS under-driven pulleys (water & steering), CDV delete, TMS CF strut brace, K&N CAI, GAS DISA rebuild, TMS pedals, Wheelskins steering wheel cover, roller tray center console, black-out grilles, and WeatherTech mats

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    Portland, OR
    Posts
    10,242
    Thanks for the inputs, y'all!

    I am now more informed, and no better off in terms of picking a tire! Right where I want to be. This is why I love this forum: "waste" time, accrue semi-useful, highly specific information. Proceed to do nothing to benefit society.

    I'm rambling - thank you all for listening.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Location
    Greensboro, NC
    Posts
    3,650

    Need to replace tires in the near future, what should I look at?

    TIRERACK.com - Revolutionizing Tire Buying
    To muddy up the waters a little bit more: we just put a set of Pilot AS3+ on the E60 and I’m not sure how I feel about them.

    • Dry grip: excellent for an all-season tire. I have taken some flyover ramps at speeds that would make the ZHP with summer tires blush. I haven’t done too much stupid shit testing (3,700lbs, long wheelbase, auto gearbox, public roads) but it takes a lot to get the tires talking, and I’ve yet to break them loose.

    • Wet grip: as @ZHPizza mentioned it’s been monsooning in North Carolina and they have been pretty damn solid in the rain. Highway speeds and inches of standing water aren’t much cause for concern.

    • Winter grip: uhh, closest we’ve had this winter is some slush...but they safely got me to and from Home Depot in said slush at butthole puckering speeds of 35mph!

    • No flat-spotting. There have been several very cold stretches where the car hasn’t moved for 5-7 days and the tires were perfectly fine. The old Conti’s flat-spotted in the same situation.

    BUT...

    • They’re expensive. #MichelinTax. Got them during a Costco special of $75 off + free installation and it was still $850ish (that car has 245/18).

    • In dry weather they seem to have a little more noise than I would’ve expected from arguably the highest rated A/S tire currently on the market. It’s probably fine in a brand new car where the noise insulation is so good you can’t hear an ambulance 2 cars behind you. But I find them annoying without the radio on, and the E60 is a really quiet cabin compared to the E46. Depending on your mods and your noise tolerances that may not be an issue.
    Emma - 2005 BMW 330ci ZHP 6MT Estorilblau Individual

    Sportline 8s 18x8.5F - 18x9.5R | APEX ARC-8 18x8.5 Square | aFe Intake | 135i Brembo F/R Calipers | 26mm Front/20mm Rear Sway Bars | Z4 Mirror
    M3 Dead Pedal | Lexus ES300 Yellow Fog Light Retrofit | Koni Yellows/H&R Springs | Llumar CTX 40% | Coby Tri-Stitch Wheel & Boots

    Awaiting Install: M3 Wing Mirrors

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