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2025 Summer and All Season Combined Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
13 min read
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Dry
  3. Wet
  4. Comfort
  5. Value
  6. Results
  7. Michelin Primacy 5
  8. Continental PremiumContact 7
  9. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
  10. Bridgestone Turanza 6
  11. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
  12. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
  13. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
  14. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
  15. Vredestein Ultrac
  16. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
  17. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
  18. Nordman South
  19. Falken ZIEX ZE320
  20. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3

Every year there's a tyre test that makes me stop and wonder how they got to their conclusion, and this year that award goes to the UTAC / Aftonbladet summer tyre test.

As a bit of scene setting, Aftonbladet is a Scandinavian newspaper, so UTAC, who performed the testing, focused on the cold weather ability of the tyres, which is something I love. However, they did make some interesting statements, and ended up with some interesting findings. In total they tested 14 tyres, 10 summer and 4 European spec all season tyres, all in 225/45 R17.

Test Publication:
225/45 R17 14 tyres 4 categories
Images courtesy of UTAC
Test Publication:
UTAC
UTAC are a large owner of automotive testing facilities.
Images courtesy of UTAC
Test Size: 225/45 R17
Tyres Tested: 14 tyres
Test Categories:
4 categories (8 tests)
Similar Tests

Firstly, the Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6, a tyre that's never had a bad test, had a bad test. A really bad test. The testers found it to be fine at warmer temperatures, but not good when it got cooler. I'm pretty sure I've tested the Asym 6 at 7c, which was their wet handling temperatures and I don't remember it being terrible.

Secondly, at least if the translation is correct, they called the Goodyear Vector 4Season Gen-3 an 'American no-season tyre.' American all season tyres can certainly be called 'no season', but American all season tyres do not have 3PMSF marking and are bad in the winter. The Goodyear Vector 4Season Gen-3 is not sold in America, it is a a 3PMSF marked European all season tyre, a totally different category of tyre.

Thirdly, the inclusion of all season tyres at all is debatable as they're not really intended for the scandinavian market. Perhaps they were intending to position them as a summer tyre alternative, but they certainly shouldn't be viewed as a year round tyre in those regions. The writer seemed pretty angry they existed at all.

I commend the effort put in to test at multiple temperatures, it's a shame they didn't share more of the data. When they have tested at multiple temperatures, they have averaged the data and just provided the average. It would be super interesting to see the swing of tyre temperatures in wet braking, as we did in the same tunnel here.

The biggest question is of course, what happened to the Asymmetric 6. We'll do some more digging to find out.

Here's the data from the test.

Dry

Dry braking results aligned closely with handling assessments, with summer tyres stopping substantially shorter. The difference was particularly dramatic, the best summer tyres (Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2 and Continental PremiumContact 7) stopped from 100 km/h in just 34.2 meters compared to 40.8 meters for the worst-performing all-season tyre (Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-3) - a substantial 6.6-meter or 16.2% difference that could be critical in emergency situations.

Dry Braking

Dry braking in meters (100 - 5 km/h) (Lower is better)
  1. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    34.20 M
  2. Continental PremiumContact 7
    34.20 M
  3. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    34.60 M
  4. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    35.10 M
  5. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    35.10 M
  6. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    35.20 M
  7. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    35.70 M
  8. Michelin Primacy 5
    36.00 M
  9. Vredestein Ultrac
    36.90 M
  10. Nordman South
    37.40 M
  11. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    37.90 M
  12. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    38.00 M
  13. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    39.70 M
  14. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    40.80 M

Dry handling evaluations were conducted across an even wider temperature range, with tests at the Pirelli track in Vizzola at a summer-like 20-30°C, contrasted with controlled indoor testing at much cooler temperatures.

The Continental PremiumContact 7 stood alone at the top of the subjective ratings with a perfect 10-point score, demonstrating exceptional precision and grip across all test temperatures. Most summer tyres clustered together with strong 9-point ratings, showing their design optimization for these conditions.

All-season tyres showed clear compromises in dry handling, with the Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6 and Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-3 receiving the lowest scores of 7 points. Testers noted that all-season tyres felt noticeably softer with delayed steering responses and earlier onset of understeer compared to dedicated summer options. This performance deficit was consistent across temperatures but became even more apparent as ambient conditions warmed.

Subj. Dry Handling

Subjective Dry Handling Score (Higher is better)
  1. Continental PremiumContact 7
    10.00 Points
  2. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    9.00 Points
  3. Michelin Primacy 5
    9.00 Points
  4. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    9.00 Points
  5. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    9.00 Points
  6. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    9.00 Points
  7. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    9.00 Points
  8. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    9.00 Points
  9. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    8.00 Points
  10. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    8.00 Points
  11. Vredestein Ultrac
    8.00 Points
  12. Nordman South
    8.00 Points
  13. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    7.00 Points
  14. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    7.00 Points

Wet

Rather than just testing tyres under a single set of conditions, the test examined performance across multiple temperature environments, providing insights into how these tyres perform in real-world variation.

Wet braking tests were conducted at +17°C on Pirelli's Italian test track, but also at +2°C, +7°C, and +12°C in Testworld's indoor facility in Finland. The results were averaged.

This approach revealed performance variations that wouldn't be apparent in conventional single-temperature testing. At +12°C, summer and all-season tyres demonstrated comparable braking performance. However, as temperatures increased to +17°C, summer tyres gained a significant advantage, stopping nearly three meters shorter on average.

The most surprising finding came at the lower end of the temperature spectrum. At just +2°C on wet roads, all-season tyres dramatically outperformed their summer counterparts, stopping almost 6.5 meters shorter from 80 km/h. This represents a critical safety advantage in cooler conditions that drivers in northern regions frequently encounter, even during nominal summer months.

When averaged out, the Michelin Primacy 5 delivered the best overall wet braking performance at 33.0 meters, closely followed by the Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2 at 33.1 meters and the Nokian Hakka Blue 3 at 33.2 meters. These premium summer tyres demonstrated their ability to maintain consistent performance across varying temperatures.

Among the all-season options, the Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6 performed ok at 33.5 meters, with the Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3 following at 33.8 meters. The temperature-specific strengths of these tyres indicate why they earned their "autumn and spring" nickname from the test team.

At the other end of the spectrum, the Vredestein Ultrac struggled significantly with wet braking, requiring 36.5 meters to stop - a full 3.5 meters (or 9.6%) more distance than the class-leading Michelin. Such a difference could prove decisive in an emergency situation, highlighting the importance of tyre selection based on typical driving conditions.

Wet Braking

Wet braking in meters (80 - 5 km/h) (Lower is better)
  1. Michelin Primacy 5
    33.00 M
  2. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    33.10 M
  3. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    33.20 M
  4. Continental PremiumContact 7
    33.40 M
  5. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    33.50 M
  6. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    33.80 M
  7. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    33.90 M
  8. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    34.00 M
  9. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    34.20 M
  10. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    35.20 M
  11. Nordman South
    35.30 M
  12. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    35.40 M
  13. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    36.30 M
  14. Vredestein Ultrac
    36.50 M

The wet handling tests provided some of the most revealing insights into the performance differences between dedicated summer tyres and all-season alternatives across varying temperature conditions. 

The temperature on the wet track ranged from +7°C to +14°C, which the testers noted are "unfortunately quite normal summer temperatures" for Scandinavian regions. 

Summer tyres generally demonstrated better handling characteristics on wet surfaces at moderate to warm temperatures, with the Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2 and Continental PremiumContact 7 achieving the fastest lap times at 75.5 seconds. The Nokian Hakka Blue 3 followed closely at 76.5 seconds. These summer tyres offered precise steering feedback and predictable behavior at the limit.

In contrast, all-season tyres struggled significantly with wet handling, clustering near the bottom of the rankings. The Continental AllSeasonContact 2 recorded the slowest time at 79.0 seconds, 3.5 seconds (or 4.4%) behind the class leaders. This performance gap widens further as temperatures increase, though the all-season options showed improved competitiveness when temperatures dropped closer to freezing.

Wet Handling

Wet handling time in seconds (Lower is better)
  1. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    75.50 s
  2. Continental PremiumContact 7
    75.50 s
  3. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    76.50 s
  4. Vredestein Ultrac
    77.40 s
  5. Michelin Primacy 5
    77.40 s
  6. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    77.40 s
  7. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    77.80 s
  8. Nordman South
    77.90 s
  9. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    78.00 s
  10. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    78.30 s
  11. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    78.30 s
  12. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    78.40 s
  13. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    78.90 s
  14. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    79.00 s

The subjective assessments reflected these timing differences, with testers noting that summer tyres maintained better steering precision and lateral grip through corners, while all-season alternatives felt softer with more progressive breakaway characteristics but ultimately less capability. The Continental PremiumContact 7 and Michelin Primacy 5 earned perfect 10-point ratings for their exceptional balance of performance and predictability in wet conditions.

Subj. Wet Handling

Subjective Wet Handling Score (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin Primacy 5
    10.00 Points
  2. Continental PremiumContact 7
    10.00 Points
  3. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    9.00 Points
  4. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    9.00 Points
  5. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    9.00 Points
  6. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    9.00 Points
  7. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    8.00 Points
  8. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    8.00 Points
  9. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    8.00 Points
  10. Vredestein Ultrac
    8.00 Points
  11. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    8.00 Points
  12. Nordman South
    8.00 Points
  13. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    7.00 Points
  14. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    7.00 Points

Unlike some performance metrics where the differences between tyres might be subtle, aquaplaning resistance showed dramatic variations between the best and worst performers. The Michelin Primacy 5 demonstrated exceptional water evacuation capabilities, maintaining contact with the road surface up to 79.4 km/h. The Vredestein Ultrac followed at a respectable 78.6 km/h, with Continental's PremiumContact 7 and Goodyear's Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6 both achieving 78.0 km/h.

All-season tyres as a category showed concerning weakness in aquaplaning resistance, with three of the four options occupying positions at the bottom of the rankings. The Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-3 lost grip at just 73.2 km/h - a full 6.2 km/h (or 8.5%) lower than the class-leading Michelin. The Continental AllSeasonContact 2 performed only marginally better at 73.4 km/h.

Straight Aqua

Float Speed in Km/H (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin Primacy 5
    79.40 Km/H
  2. Vredestein Ultrac
    78.60 Km/H
  3. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    78.00 Km/H
  4. Continental PremiumContact 7
    78.00 Km/H
  5. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    77.70 Km/H
  6. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    77.40 Km/H
  7. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    77.40 Km/H
  8. Nordman South
    77.30 Km/H
  9. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    77.10 Km/H
  10. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    77.10 Km/H
  11. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    76.30 Km/H
  12. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    75.30 Km/H
  13. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    73.40 Km/H
  14. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    73.20 Km/H

Comfort

Tyre noise evaluations were conducted using a qualitative approach that mirrors how consumers experience cabin noise. Rather than relying solely on technical measurements, two evaluators - one driving and one in the rear seat - assessed both the volume and tonal quality of tyre noise across various road surfaces.

The testers noted that while instrumented measurements can quantify overall decibel levels, the human ear remains "an unrivalled measuring tool" for determining how intrusive or pleasant different tyre noise signatures feel to occupants. This approach acknowledges that two tyres with identical decibel readings can produce very different subjective experiences due to frequency patterns and sound quality.

The Bridgestone Turanza 6, Michelin Primacy 5, and Falken ZIEX ZE320 all achieved perfect 10-point scores for their quiet and refined operation. The Continental AllSeasonContact 2 also earned top marks, demonstrating that all-season design can offer advantages in comfort metrics even when sacrificing performance in other areas.

Most tyres clustered around the 8-9 point range, suggesting that modern tyre design has generally achieved good noise control across market segments. The test found minimal correlation between noise levels and other performance attributes, indicating manufacturers can optimize for quietness without necessarily compromising grip or handling.

Subj. Noise

Subjective in car noise levels (Higher is better)
  1. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    10.00 Points
  2. Michelin Primacy 5
    10.00 Points
  3. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    10.00 Points
  4. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    10.00 Points
  5. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    9.00 Points
  6. Nordman South
    9.00 Points
  7. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    9.00 Points
  8. Continental PremiumContact 7
    8.00 Points
  9. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    8.00 Points
  10. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    8.00 Points
  11. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    8.00 Points
  12. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    8.00 Points
  13. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    8.00 Points
  14. Vredestein Ultrac
    8.00 Points

Value

Please note, the magazine published the Bridgestone summer as best (0), and then percentage increases in consumption for the rest of the tyres. The calculation or data behind this was not provided, so we have simply taken the rolling resistance value of the Bridgestone in this size from another test and calculated the other values, which might lead to inaccuracies.

Rolling Resistance

Rolling resistance in kg t (Lower is better)
  1. Bridgestone Turanza 6
    7.60 kg / t
  2. Michelin Primacy 5
    7.74 kg / t
  3. Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
    7.85 kg / t
  4. Vredestein Ultrac
    7.87 kg / t
  5. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    7.89 kg / t
  6. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    7.90 kg / t
  7. Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
    7.90 kg / t
  8. Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
    7.90 kg / t
  9. Nokian Hakka Blue 3
    7.95 kg / t
  10. Falken ZIEX ZE320
    7.99 kg / t
  11. Hankook Ventus Prime 4
    7.99 kg / t
  12. Nordman South
    8.03 kg / t
  13. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
    8.04 kg / t
  14. Continental PremiumContact 7
    8.04 kg / t

Results

1st

Michelin Primacy 5

225/45 R17 W9
Michelin Primacy 5
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1456.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 8th 36 M 34.2 M +1.8 M 95%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 1st 33 M 100%
Wet Handling 4th 77.4 s 75.5 s +1.9 s 97.55%
Subj. Wet Handling 1st 10 Points 100%
Straight Aqua 1st 79.4 Km/H 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 1st 10 Points 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 2nd 7.74 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.14 kg / t 98.19%
2nd

Continental PremiumContact 7

225/45 R17 Y9
Continental PremiumContact 7
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1230.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 1st 34.2 M 100%
Subj. Dry Handling 1st 10 Points 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 4th 33.4 M 33 M +0.4 M 98.8%
Wet Handling 1st 75.5 s 100%
Subj. Wet Handling 1st 10 Points 100%
Straight Aqua 3rd 78 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -1.4 Km/H 98.24%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 13th 8.04 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.44 kg / t 94.53%
3rd

Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2

225/45 R17 Y9
Pirelli Cinturato P7 C2
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1344.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 1st 34.2 M 100%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 2nd 33.1 M 33 M +0.1 M 99.7%
Wet Handling 1st 75.5 s 100%
Subj. Wet Handling 3rd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Straight Aqua 6th 77.4 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -2 Km/H 97.48%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 5th 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 6th 7.9 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.3 kg / t 96.2%
4th

Bridgestone Turanza 6

225/45 R17 Y9
Bridgestone Turanza 6
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1018.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 7th 35.7 M 34.2 M +1.5 M 95.8%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 7th 33.9 M 33 M +0.9 M 97.35%
Wet Handling 7th 77.8 s 75.5 s +2.3 s 97.04%
Subj. Wet Handling 3rd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Straight Aqua 12th 75.3 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -4.1 Km/H 94.84%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 1st 10 Points 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 1st 7.6 kg / t 100%
5th

Nokian Hakka Blue 3

225/45 R17 Y9
Nokian Hakka Blue 3
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1562.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 3rd 34.6 M 34.2 M +0.4 M 98.84%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 3rd 33.2 M 33 M +0.2 M 99.4%
Wet Handling 3rd 76.5 s 75.5 s +1 s 98.69%
Subj. Wet Handling 3rd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Straight Aqua 9th 77.1 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -2.3 Km/H 97.1%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 9th 7.95 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.35 kg / t 95.6%
6th

Hankook Ventus Prime 4

225/45 R17 W9
Hankook Ventus Prime 4
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1018.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 4th 35.1 M 34.2 M +0.9 M 97.44%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 8th 34 M 33 M +1 M 97.06%
Wet Handling 4th 77.4 s 75.5 s +1.9 s 97.55%
Subj. Wet Handling 3rd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Straight Aqua 5th 77.7 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -1.7 Km/H 97.86%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 10th 7.99 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.39 kg / t 95.12%
Bridgestone Turanza All Season 6
  • 3PMSF: yes
  • Price: 1195.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 12th 38 M 34.2 M +3.8 M 90%
Subj. Dry Handling 13th 7 Points 10 Points -3 Points 70%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 5th 33.5 M 33 M +0.5 M 98.51%
Wet Handling 9th 78 s 75.5 s +2.5 s 96.79%
Subj. Wet Handling 7th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Straight Aqua 11th 76.3 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -3.1 Km/H 96.1%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 5th 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 3rd 7.85 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.25 kg / t 96.82%
Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3
  • 3PMSF: yes
  • Price: 1312.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 11th 37.9 M 34.2 M +3.7 M 90.24%
Subj. Dry Handling 9th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 6th 33.8 M 33 M +0.8 M 97.63%
Wet Handling 12th 78.4 s 75.5 s +2.9 s 96.3%
Subj. Wet Handling 7th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Straight Aqua 6th 77.4 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -2 Km/H 97.48%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 6th 7.9 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.3 kg / t 96.2%
9th

Vredestein Ultrac

225/45 R17 Y9
Vredestein Ultrac
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1280.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 9th 36.9 M 34.2 M +2.7 M 92.68%
Subj. Dry Handling 9th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 14th 36.5 M 33 M +3.5 M 90.41%
Wet Handling 4th 77.4 s 75.5 s +1.9 s 97.55%
Subj. Wet Handling 7th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Straight Aqua 2nd 78.6 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -0.8 Km/H 98.99%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 4th 7.87 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.27 kg / t 96.57%
10th

Continental AllSeasonContact 2

225/45 R17 V9
Continental AllSeasonContact 2
  • 3PMSF: yes
  • Price: 1346.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 13th 39.7 M 34.2 M +5.5 M 86.15%
Subj. Dry Handling 9th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 9th 34.2 M 33 M +1.2 M 96.49%
Wet Handling 14th 79 s 75.5 s +3.5 s 95.57%
Subj. Wet Handling 7th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Straight Aqua 13th 73.4 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -6 Km/H 92.44%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 1st 10 Points 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 5th 7.89 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.29 kg / t 96.32%
11th

Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6

225/45 R17 Y9
Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1402.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 4th 35.1 M 34.2 M +0.9 M 97.44%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 10th 35.2 M 33 M +2.2 M 93.75%
Wet Handling 10th 78.3 s 75.5 s +2.8 s 96.42%
Subj. Wet Handling 13th 7 Points 10 Points -3 Points 70%
Straight Aqua 3rd 78 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -1.4 Km/H 98.24%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 13th 8.04 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.44 kg / t 94.53%
12th

Nordman South

225/45 R17 W9
Nordman South
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1259.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 10th 37.4 M 34.2 M +3.2 M 91.44%
Subj. Dry Handling 9th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 11th 35.3 M 33 M +2.3 M 93.48%
Wet Handling 8th 77.9 s 75.5 s +2.4 s 96.92%
Subj. Wet Handling 7th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Straight Aqua 8th 77.3 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -2.1 Km/H 97.36%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 5th 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 12th 8.03 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.43 kg / t 94.65%
13th

Falken ZIEX ZE320

225/45 R17 W9
Falken ZIEX ZE320
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Price: 1162.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 6th 35.2 M 34.2 M +1 M 97.16%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 9 Points 10 Points -1 Points 90%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 13th 36.3 M 33 M +3.3 M 90.91%
Wet Handling 13th 78.9 s 75.5 s +3.4 s 95.69%
Subj. Wet Handling 13th 7 Points 10 Points -3 Points 70%
Straight Aqua 9th 77.1 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -2.3 Km/H 97.1%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 1st 10 Points 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 10th 7.99 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.39 kg / t 95.12%
14th

Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3

225/45 R17 W9
Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
  • 3PMSF: yes
  • Price: 1163.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 14th 40.8 M 34.2 M +6.6 M 83.82%
Subj. Dry Handling 13th 7 Points 10 Points -3 Points 70%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 12th 35.4 M 33 M +2.4 M 93.22%
Wet Handling 10th 78.3 s 75.5 s +2.8 s 96.42%
Subj. Wet Handling 7th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Straight Aqua 14th 73.2 Km/H 79.4 Km/H -6.2 Km/H 92.19%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Noise 8th 8 Points 10 Points -2 Points 80%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 6th 7.9 kg / t 7.6 kg / t +0.3 kg / t 96.2%

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