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2026 AutoView All-Season Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
5 min read
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Dry
  3. Wet
  4. Comfort
  5. Results
  6. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
  7. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
  8. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
  9. Hankook Weatherflex GT

AutoView's first comparison of high-inch all-season tyres pits the all-new Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport and Hankook Weatherflex GT against the established Continental AllSeasonContact 2 and Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-3. All four tyres were tested in 255/45R19 on a BMW 520i, a fitment also common on the Tesla Model Y.

Test Publication:
255/45R19 4 tyres 3 categories
Images courtesy of AutoView
Test Publication:
AutoView
A Korean automotive publication that does tyre tests
Images courtesy of AutoView
Test Size: 255/45R19
Tyres Tested: 4 tyres
Test Categories:
3 categories (7 tests)
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The Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport took the overall win with the best dry braking, the highest cornering speed, the top subjective handling and ride scores, and shared the lowest measured noise level. The Continental AllSeasonContact 2 finished second on the back of its wet braking and consistent results across the other tests.

The Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-3 placed third - well behind the European pair on outright performance, but clear of the Hankook on every safety-relevant test. AutoView's tester was sharply critical of the Hankook Weatherflex GT, citing the longest braking distances, the lowest cornering speed, and steady-state cornering behaviour that lost grip below 95 km/h with little warning.

Dry

The Michelin recorded the shortest dry braking distance at 36.83 m, with the Continental 1.5 m behind. The Goodyear and Hankook stopped more than four metres further on, putting them in a different class of performance for an emergency stop from 100 km/h.

Dry Braking

Spread: 5.15 M (14%)|Avg: 39.60 M
Dry braking in meters (100 - 0 km/h) (Lower is better)
  1. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    36.83 M
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    38.36 M
  3. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    41.24 M
  4. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    41.98 M

The same order broadly holds for steady-state cornering grip. The Michelin held 73.9 km/h on the skidpad, the Continental and Goodyear were within a kilometre per hour of each other, and the Hankook gave up grip at 71.2 km/h.

Dry Handling

Spread: 2.73 Km/H (3.7%)|Avg: 72.73 Km/H
Dry Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    73.90 Km/H
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    73.10 Km/H
  3. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    72.73 Km/H
  4. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    71.17 Km/H

Subjective handling scores follow the same pattern. The Michelin and Continental both feel linear and predictable up to the limit; the Goodyear loses some linearity and transitions into oversteer; the Hankook's combination of slow steering response, oversteer beyond about 95 km/h and rapid grip loss earned the lowest score of the test.

Subj. Dry Handling

Spread: 1.50 Points (19.7%)|Avg: 7.05 Points
Subjective Dry Handling Score (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    7.60 Points
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    7.40 Points
  3. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    7.10 Points
  4. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    6.10 Points

Wet

Wet braking is the only category where Continental displaces Michelin from the top spot. The AllSeasonContact 2 stopped from 80 km/h in 27.24 m, with the Michelin a metre and a quarter behind. The Goodyear and Hankook again sit several metres further on.

Wet Braking

Spread: 6.67 M (24.5%)|Avg: 30.36 M
Wet braking in meters (80 - 0 km/h) (Lower is better)
  1. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    27.24 M
  2. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    28.53 M
  3. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    31.74 M
  4. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    33.91 M

Comfort

Measured noise is tightly grouped within half a decibel. The Michelin and Goodyear share the lowest reading at 59.0 and 59.1 dB; the Hankook reads 59.5 dB.

Noise

Spread: 0.50 dB (0.8%)|Avg: 59.23 dB
External noise in dB (Lower is better)
  1. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    59.00 dB
  2. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    59.10 dB
  3. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    59.30 dB
  4. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    59.50 dB

The Hankook reverses the order on subjective noise: the tester rated its sound character as the least intrusive of the four, just ahead of the Michelin and Continental, with the Goodyear at the back. The point spread is small.

Subj. Noise

Spread: 0.20 Points (2.9%)|Avg: 6.80 Points
Subjective in car noise levels (Higher is better)
  1. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    6.90 Points
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    6.80 Points
  3. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    6.80 Points
  4. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    6.70 Points

Subjective ride comfort rewards the Michelin's mix of damping and stiffness, with the Continental close behind. The Goodyear feels firmer; the Hankook picks up too much body motion across speed-bumps and rough surfaces.

Subj. Comfort

Spread: 0.70 Points (9.6%)|Avg: 7.00 Points
Subjective Comfort Score (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
    7.30 Points
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact 2
    7.20 Points
  3. Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
    6.90 Points
  4. Hankook Weatherflex GT
    6.60 Points

Results

The Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport is the clear overall winner; the Continental AllSeasonContact 2 is the next-best option, particularly in the wet. The Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-3 is a competent value choice. The Hankook Weatherflex GT is not recommended in this fitment on safety grounds.

2026 AutoView All-Season Tyre TestWatch the full video of this test on YouTube Watch on YouTube
Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
  • Weight: 12.22 kgs
  • Tread: 6.18 mm
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 1st 36.83 M 100%
Dry Handling 1st 73.9 Km/H 100%
Subj. Dry Handling 1st 7.6 Points 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 2nd 28.53 M 27.24 M +1.29 M 95.48%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 1st 7.3 Points 100%
Subj. Noise 2nd 6.8 Points 6.9 Points -0.1 Points 98.55%
Noise 1st 59 dB 100%
Continental AllSeasonContact 2
  • Weight: 11.82 kgs
  • Tread: 7.02 mm
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 2nd 38.36 M 36.83 M +1.53 M 96.01%
Dry Handling 2nd 73.1 Km/H 73.9 Km/H -0.8 Km/H 98.92%
Subj. Dry Handling 2nd 7.4 Points 7.6 Points -0.2 Points 97.37%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 1st 27.24 M 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 2nd 7.2 Points 7.3 Points -0.1 Points 98.63%
Subj. Noise 2nd 6.8 Points 6.9 Points -0.1 Points 98.55%
Noise 3rd 59.3 dB 59 dB +0.3 dB 99.49%
Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen 3
  • Weight: 11.11 kgs
  • Tread: 6.00 mm
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 3rd 41.24 M 36.83 M +4.41 M 89.31%
Dry Handling 3rd 72.73 Km/H 73.9 Km/H -1.17 Km/H 98.42%
Subj. Dry Handling 3rd 7.1 Points 7.6 Points -0.5 Points 93.42%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 3rd 31.74 M 27.24 M +4.5 M 85.82%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 3rd 6.9 Points 7.3 Points -0.4 Points 94.52%
Subj. Noise 4th 6.7 Points 6.9 Points -0.2 Points 97.1%
Noise 2nd 59.1 dB 59 dB +0.1 dB 99.83%
4th

Hankook Weatherflex GT

255/45R19
Hankook Weatherflex GT
  • Weight: 13.83 kgs
  • Tread: 7.70 mm
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 4th 41.98 M 36.83 M +5.15 M 87.73%
Dry Handling 4th 71.17 Km/H 73.9 Km/H -2.73 Km/H 96.31%
Subj. Dry Handling 4th 6.1 Points 7.6 Points -1.5 Points 80.26%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 4th 33.91 M 27.24 M +6.67 M 80.33%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Subj. Comfort 4th 6.6 Points 7.3 Points -0.7 Points 90.41%
Subj. Noise 1st 6.9 Points 100%
Noise 4th 59.5 dB 59 dB +0.5 dB 99.16%

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