Best OE Tires for Honda Accord?
Hello, I'm currently looking into wear of OE tires for Honda Accords. If you have any knowledge of the stock tires that come with a Honda Accord, please take the survey below. The survey is only 2 questions and will take less than a minute of your time:
Survey Monkey Link The tires under consideration are: Hankook Kinergy GT H436 - 225/50R17 Michelin Energy Saver A/S - 225/50R17 Goodyear Eagle Touring - 235/40R19 Continental ContiProContact - 235/40R19 Michelin Primacy MXM4 - 235/40R19 Thank you for your time. Please feel free to leave any comments in the forum below. |
Originally Posted by stefanjenkins
(Post 386170)
Hello, I'm currently looking into wear of OE tires for Honda Accords. If you have any knowledge of the stock tires that come with a Honda Accord, please take the survey below. The survey is only 2 questions and will take less than a minute of your time:
Survey Monkey Link The tires under consideration are: Hankook Kinergy GT H436 - 225/50R17 Michelin Energy Saver A/S - 225/50R17 Goodyear Eagle Touring - 235/40R19 Continental ContiProContact - 235/40R19 Michelin Primacy MXM4 - 235/40R19 Thank you for your time. Please feel free to leave any comments in the forum below. |
Originally Posted by shipo
(Post 386171)
What are you trying to achieve from this survey?
|
There's too many sides to the "best tire" questions. Best ride comfort? Best traction in the snow? Best tread life? Best cornering on a dry track? As much as the tire companies advertise, there is NO SUCH THING as a tire that does it all.
I have a co-worker who doesn't like his Accord because he says the ride is too harsh. To me his car is too soft. He and I would never pick the same tire as "the best choice". Neither one of us is right or wrong... |
The problem with asking about tires is different makes and models are "the absolute best" depending upon one's point of view; a grippy summer tire with only 15,000 miles of tread life will be the best for some, high mileage/low traction tires may be the best for others; for the rest of us, somewhere in the middle is the best. Regarding brand, this can be rather irrelevant; while Michelin generally makes good tires, they make some crap ones as well; same thing for Pirelli, Bridgestone, Continental, and Hankook.
In lieu of a survey here where you're only likely to get a handful of responses, go to TireRack (or one of the other major online tire vendors) and read the reviews and test reports for the tires in your size; this will arm you with WAY more useful knowledge than what you'll be able to glean from this thread. |
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