Originally Posted by
j44ke
Sad story of tire abuse here - I had Nokian Hakkapeliitta's but during the first year of covid, I just completely blanked on switching them back to my regular tires. Had I removed them, they probably had at least another season in them. When my brain returned in September, I realized that the tires in the corner of our garage were the Michelin Primacy MXV4 tires and the Hakkapeliitta's were still on the car. A lot of things went by the wayside in those first several months of 2020. For me it was tires. Anyway, by then the Hakkepeliittas were behaving as if they had gone square, so I switched back to the Michelins and drove them all last winter and then this winter with few if any real problems. I take the car out of traction control and drive it in sport mode and things are fine. Figuring out how to turn off traction control on the Volvo (was not clear from the manual at all and language made it counterintuitive almost) was the big improvement, not the snow tires. Snow tires still did not allow me to drive up our driveway if the traction control was still on. We definitely get snow and ice all winter here, but even just twenty miles north, snow tires seem like a no-brainer. Here they are helpful in some situations, but if you know how to drive in snow, you can do it with good all or 4 seasons tires. And traction control off.
The one thing that rotating out 4 seasons tires with winter tires does is prolong the life of your 4 seasons tires. But it increases your winter tire budget by 100%. And if you are doing it right, you are managing a second set of tires with rims and pressure sensors. And that prolongs the life of both tires, but it also a hassle. I used to work on cars I owned all the time, so I'm pretty burned out on cars. AWD seems like an advantage to me because (as mentioned above) it not only adds some rear-end traction but along with it the car is usually designed for a bit higher clearance. I'm thinking Town and Country here, not SUV. But 4WD seems more of a real difference than AWD, so if money was burnable, we'd have a small 4WD truck for the limited number of really rough days. Maybe emergency plowing. Hauling stuff. Otherwise the Volvo does fine. And it would last longer not being used as a pickup truck like I do now.
Cars are stupid. I'd rather not have to care for them like a horse. Ours is the most dependable car we've ever had, and I still don't like having to do the 4 or 5 things required to keep it in good shape.
rant over
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