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2026 Autobild Sports Cars Summer Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
8 min read
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Dry Braking
  3. Dry Handling
  4. Wet
  5. Wet Braking
  6. Wet Handling
  7. Wet Circle
  8. Straight Aquaplaning
  9. Comfort
  10. Subjective Comfort
  11. Noise
  12. Value
  13. Rolling Resistance
  14. Results
  15. Continental SportContact 7
  16. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
  17. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
  18. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
  19. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
  20. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
  21. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
  22. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport

Auto Bild Sportscars tested eight summer tyres in 255/35 R19 and 275/35 R19 - a staggered fitment used on cars like the BMW Z4, BMW Supra, and F series BMW M3/M4 models. Testing took place at the Wachauring circuit in Austria, covering wet and dry handling, braking, aquaplaning, skidpad grip, noise, and rolling resistance. The BMW Z4 served as the test car. The field includes Continental, Bridgestone, Pirelli, Vredestein, Kumho, Michelin, Hankook, and Goodyear.

Test Summary

Aquaplaning balance with staggered fitments

The aquaplaning results highlight a challenge specific to staggered tyre setups. Wider rear tyres act more like surfboards in standing water, so they tend to lose contact with the road before the narrower fronts. The Michelin is the most extreme example: its front tyre holds grip up to 90.2 km/h - the best in the test - but the rear floats at just 83.4 km/h, the worst. That means there's a window where the front axle is still steering normally but the rear has already lost grip, which can cause sudden oversteer in heavy rain. The Hankook is the opposite case, with both axles floating at exactly 87.9 km/h. Auto Bild Sportscars' advice is simple: back off the throttle in heavy rain, regardless of which tyre you're running.

The Goodyear result

The Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport's last-place finish is worth some context. It lost over 15 km/h to the Continental on the wet handling course and needed 51.5 m to stop from 100 km/h in the wet - over 9 m more than the best. The testers attribute this not to the tyre being fundamentally poor, but to a mismatch with the BMW Z4 in this specific staggered size combination. 

I tested it myself a number of years ago using a Supra, and found it was tricky; yet in a more recent test with a VW Golf the Supra Sport was excellent in the wet. Sometimes there are just difficult sizes. 

Dry Braking

The Continental stops shortest at 34.2 m, with the Bridgestone just 20 cm behind. The midfield is tightly packed, but Michelin, Goodyear, and Pirelli all exceed 36 m - notably, these are three established premium brands occupying the bottom three positions.

Dry Braking

Spread: 2.10 M (6.1%)|Avg: 35.36 M
Dry braking in meters (100 - 0 km/h) (Lower is better)
  1. Continental SportContact 7
    34.20 M
  2. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    34.40 M
  3. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    35.00 M
  4. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    35.40 M
  5. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    35.40 M
  6. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    36.00 M
  7. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    36.20 M
  8. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    36.30 M

Residual Speed Calculator

Dry Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

Dry Handling

The Continental leads again at 108.4 km/h average, with Michelin second - both work well as a mixed-size setup with the Z4's chassis, turning in sharply and staying controllable at the limit. Vredestein, Bridgestone, and Hankook form a tight group in the middle. The Goodyear is a clear outlier at 103.1 km/h, over 5 km/h off the pace and described as unbalanced in its driving feel.

Dry Handling

Spread: 5.30 Km/H (4.9%)|Avg: 106.56 Km/H
Dry Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
  1. Continental SportContact 7
    108.40 Km/H
  2. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    107.90 Km/H
  3. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    107.10 Km/H
  4. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    107.00 Km/H
  5. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    106.90 Km/H
  6. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    106.10 Km/H
  7. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    106.00 Km/H
  8. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    103.10 Km/H

Wet

Wet Braking

The Continental leads the wet braking test as well, stopping from 100 km/h in 42.4 m. The Goodyear needs 51.5 m - at the point where the Continental has already stopped, a car on Goodyears would still be travelling at nearly 40 km/h. The gap between first and last is far larger here than in the dry test, where the field was much closer together.

Wet Braking

Spread: 9.10 M (21.5%)|Avg: 46.38 M
Wet braking in meters (100 - 0 km/h) (Lower is better)
  1. Continental SportContact 7
    42.40 M
  2. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    43.90 M
  3. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    46.00 M
  4. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    46.20 M
  5. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    46.70 M
  6. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    47.00 M
  7. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    47.30 M
  8. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    51.50 M

Residual Speed Calculator

Wet Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

Wet Handling

The Continental dominates the wet handling course at nearly 79 km/h average, offering precise turn-in and sharp feedback. Pirelli and Bridgestone follow with a clear gap. The Goodyear loses over 15 km/h to the leader - a very large deficit that matches its poor wet braking result and confirms it struggles in all wet-grip tests on this car.

Wet Handling

Spread: 15.40 Km/H (19.5%)|Avg: 72.61 Km/H
Wet Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
  1. Continental SportContact 7
    78.90 Km/H
  2. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    76.50 Km/H
  3. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    75.10 Km/H
  4. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    73.30 Km/H
  5. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    72.00 Km/H
  6. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    71.20 Km/H
  7. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    70.40 Km/H
  8. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    63.50 Km/H

Wet Circle

Bridgestone and Continental build the highest lateral forces and keep the Z4 neutral longest. Pirelli is close behind. From Vredestein downwards the gaps grow, with Kumho and Hankook producing identical results. The Michelin - the most expensive tyre in the test - lands second to last, while the Goodyear is again at the bottom.

Wet Circle

Spread: 2.40 s (19.2%)|Avg: 13.54 s
Wet Circle Lap Time in seconds (Lower is better)
  1. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    12.50 s
  2. Continental SportContact 7
    12.60 s
  3. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    12.70 s
  4. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    13.30 s
  5. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    14.00 s
  6. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    14.00 s
  7. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    14.30 s
  8. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    14.90 s

Straight Aquaplaning

The Michelin front tyre resists aquaplaning longest, holding contact to 90.2 km/h - but the rear floats at just 83.4 km/h, giving it the largest front-to-rear imbalance in the field. The Hankook is the most balanced, with both axles floating at exactly 87.9 km/h. This test highlights how difficult mixed-size fitments are to get right: if the rear loses grip before the front, the car can oversteer without warning in heavy rain.

Straight Aqua

Spread: 2.80 Km/H (3.1%)|Avg: 88.38 Km/H
Float Speed in Km/H (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    90.20 Km/H
  2. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    88.90 Km/H
  3. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    88.50 Km/H
  4. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    88.30 Km/H
  5. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    88.30 Km/H
  6. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    87.90 Km/H
  7. Continental SportContact 7
    87.50 Km/H
  8. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    87.40 Km/H

Comfort

Subjective Comfort

Subj. Comfort

Spread: 1.40 Points (16.1%)|Avg: 7.91 Points
Subjective Comfort Score (Higher is better)
  1. Continental SportContact 7
    8.70 Points
  2. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    8.70 Points
  3. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    8.00 Points
  4. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    8.00 Points
  5. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    8.00 Points
  6. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    7.30 Points
  7. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    7.30 Points
  8. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    7.30 Points

Noise

The Vredestein is the quietest tyre at 70.9 dB - worth noting in an open roadster where road noise is always present. Continental and Hankook share second place at 72.0 dB. The Goodyear and Bridgestone are the loudest at over 74 dB, more than 3 dB above the Vredestein, which is a clearly audible difference.

Noise

Spread: 3.30 dB (4.7%)|Avg: 72.71 dB
External noise in dB (Lower is better)
  1. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    70.90 dB
  2. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    72.00 dB
  3. Continental SportContact 7
    72.00 dB
  4. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    72.60 dB
  5. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    72.60 dB
  6. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    73.40 dB
  7. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    74.00 dB
  8. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    74.20 dB

Value

Rolling Resistance

Hankook and Vredestein achieve the best average rolling resistance across both axle sizes. All eight tyres are relatively close in this test - there are no major outliers. Interestingly, the narrower front tyres do not automatically roll more easily for every brand; the ranking changes between the 255 and 275 sizes depending on the manufacturer.

Rolling Resistance

Spread: 2.02 kg / t (24.4%)|Avg: 9.25 kg / t
Rolling resistance in kg t (Lower is better)
  1. Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
    8.29 kg / t
  2. Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
    8.50 kg / t
  3. Vredestein Ultrac Pro
    8.69 kg / t
  4. Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
    9.21 kg / t
  5. Continental SportContact 7
    9.59 kg / t
  6. Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
    9.65 kg / t
  7. Pirelli P Zero PZ5
    9.73 kg / t
  8. Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
    10.31 kg / t

Fuel & Energy Cost Calculator

19,000 km
£1.45/L
--
Annual Difference
--
Lifetime Savings
--
Extra Fuel/Energy
--
Extra CO2

Estimates based on typical driving conditions. Rolling resistance accounts for approximately 20% of IC vehicle fuel consumption and 25% of EV energy consumption. Actual savings vary based on driving style, vehicle weight, road conditions, and tyre age. For comparative purposes only. Lifetime savings based on a 40,000km / 25,000 mile tread life.

Results

The Continental SportContact 7 wins the test with strong leads in braking and handling on both wet and dry surfaces. The Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo is a close second. Seven of eight tyres score "good" or better, which is a strong overall field. Budget options from Vredestein, Kumho, and Hankook perform well for the money.

1st

Continental SportContact 7

255/35 R19 100Y
Continental SportContact 7
  • EU Label: D/A/73
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 11.58 kgs
  • Price: 840.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 1st 34.2 M 100%
Dry Handling 1st 108.4 Km/H 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 1st 42.4 M 100%
Wet Handling 1st 78.9 Km/H 100%
Wet Circle 2nd 12.6 s 12.5 s +0.1 s 99.21%
Straight Aqua 7th 87.5 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -2.7 Km/H 97.01%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 1st 8.7 Points 100%
Noise 2nd 72 dB 70.9 dB +1.1 dB 98.47%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 5th 9.59 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +1.3 kg / t 86.44%
2nd

Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo

255/35 R19 100Y
Bridgestone Potenza Sport Evo
  • EU Label: D/A/73
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 12.79 kgs
  • Price: 880.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 2nd 34.4 M 34.2 M +0.2 M 99.42%
Dry Handling 4th 107 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -1.4 Km/H 98.71%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 2nd 43.9 M 42.4 M +1.5 M 96.58%
Wet Handling 3rd 75.1 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -3.8 Km/H 95.18%
Wet Circle 1st 12.5 s 100%
Straight Aqua 8th 87.4 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -2.8 Km/H 96.9%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 1st 8.7 Points 100%
Noise 7th 74 dB 70.9 dB +3.1 dB 95.81%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 4th 9.21 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +0.92 kg / t 90.01%
3rd

Pirelli P Zero PZ5

255/35 R19 100Y
Pirelli P Zero PZ5
  • EU Label: C/A/72
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 10.87 kgs
  • Price: 800.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 6th 36 M 34.2 M +1.8 M 95%
Dry Handling 7th 106 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -2.4 Km/H 97.79%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 5th 46.7 M 42.4 M +4.3 M 90.79%
Wet Handling 2nd 76.5 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -2.4 Km/H 96.96%
Wet Circle 3rd 12.7 s 12.5 s +0.2 s 98.43%
Straight Aqua 2nd 88.9 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -1.3 Km/H 98.56%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 6th 7.3 Points 8.7 Points -1.4 Points 83.91%
Noise 4th 72.6 dB 70.9 dB +1.7 dB 97.66%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 7th 9.73 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +1.44 kg / t 85.2%
3rd

Vredestein Ultrac Pro

255/35 R19 100Y
Vredestein Ultrac Pro
  • EU Label: C/A/72
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 12.50 kgs
  • Price: 740.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 3rd 35 M 34.2 M +0.8 M 97.71%
Dry Handling 3rd 107.1 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -1.3 Km/H 98.8%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 4th 46.2 M 42.4 M +3.8 M 91.77%
Wet Handling 4th 73.3 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -5.6 Km/H 92.9%
Wet Circle 4th 13.3 s 12.5 s +0.8 s 93.98%
Straight Aqua 3rd 88.5 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -1.7 Km/H 98.12%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 3rd 8 Points 8.7 Points -0.7 Points 91.95%
Noise 1st 70.9 dB 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 3rd 8.69 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +0.4 kg / t 95.4%
5th

Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72

255/35 R19 100Y
Kumho Ecsta Sport S PS72
  • EU Label: C/A/72
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 12.15 kgs
  • Price: 660.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 4th 35.4 M 34.2 M +1.2 M 96.61%
Dry Handling 6th 106.1 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -2.3 Km/H 97.88%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 6th 47 M 42.4 M +4.6 M 90.21%
Wet Handling 5th 72 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -6.9 Km/H 91.25%
Wet Circle 5th 14 s 12.5 s +1.5 s 89.29%
Straight Aqua 4th 88.3 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -1.9 Km/H 97.89%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 3rd 8 Points 8.7 Points -0.7 Points 91.95%
Noise 6th 73.4 dB 70.9 dB +2.5 dB 96.59%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 6th 9.65 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +1.36 kg / t 85.91%
5th

Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S

255/35 R19 100Y
Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S
  • EU Label: C/A/71
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 12.59 kgs
  • Price: 1020.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 8th 36.3 M 34.2 M +2.1 M 94.21%
Dry Handling 2nd 107.9 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -0.5 Km/H 99.54%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 7th 47.3 M 42.4 M +4.9 M 89.64%
Wet Handling 6th 71.2 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -7.7 Km/H 90.24%
Wet Circle 7th 14.3 s 12.5 s +1.8 s 87.41%
Straight Aqua 1st 90.2 Km/H 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 6th 7.3 Points 8.7 Points -1.4 Points 83.91%
Noise 4th 72.6 dB 70.9 dB +1.7 dB 97.66%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 2nd 8.5 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +0.21 kg / t 97.53%
7th

Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129

255/35 R19 100Y
Hankook Ventus S1 Evo Z K129
  • EU Label: C/A/73
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 12.80 kgs
  • Price: 730.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 4th 35.4 M 34.2 M +1.2 M 96.61%
Dry Handling 5th 106.9 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -1.5 Km/H 98.62%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 3rd 46 M 42.4 M +3.6 M 92.17%
Wet Handling 7th 70.4 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -8.5 Km/H 89.23%
Wet Circle 5th 14 s 12.5 s +1.5 s 89.29%
Straight Aqua 6th 87.9 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -2.3 Km/H 97.45%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 3rd 8 Points 8.7 Points -0.7 Points 91.95%
Noise 2nd 72 dB 70.9 dB +1.1 dB 98.47%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 1st 8.29 kg / t 100%
8th

Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport

255/35 R19 100Y
Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperSport
  • EU Label: D/A/73
  • 3PMSF: no
  • Weight: 12.08 kgs
  • Price: 870.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 7th 36.2 M 34.2 M +2 M 94.48%
Dry Handling 8th 103.1 Km/H 108.4 Km/H -5.3 Km/H 95.11%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 8th 51.5 M 42.4 M +9.1 M 82.33%
Wet Handling 8th 63.5 Km/H 78.9 Km/H -15.4 Km/H 80.48%
Wet Circle 8th 14.9 s 12.5 s +2.4 s 83.89%
Straight Aqua 4th 88.3 Km/H 90.2 Km/H -1.9 Km/H 97.89%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 6th 7.3 Points 8.7 Points -1.4 Points 83.91%
Noise 8th 74.2 dB 70.9 dB +3.3 dB 95.55%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Rolling Resistance 8th 10.31 kg / t 8.29 kg / t +2.02 kg / t 80.41%

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