Following on from the 51 winter tyre braking test, the excellent German publication Auto Bild have promoted the best 20 tyres to their full winter test, which covers every aspect of the winter tyres performance.
As always, an (unnamed) summer and all season tyre have been included as reference, and to make a change from the past few years, it isn’t the remarkable Continental WinterContact TS860 taking the top spot overall…
Dry
During the dry braking test the summer tyre dominated, with the all season tyre bridging the gap between the best winter tyre and the summer tyre (which leads us to guess the all season tyre was either the Michelin CrossClimate or Continental AllSeasonContact.) Yokohama had a small dry braking advantage, but the rest of the pack was extremely close, covered by just a few meters.
Dry Braking
Spread: 7.70 M (19.5%)|Avg: 45.35 M
Dry braking in meters (Lower is better)
Dry Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre
Dry handling resulted with the summer tyre with a similar advantage, but this time the Hankook was the leading winter tyre.
Dry Handling
Spread: 5.10 Km/H (4.6%)|Avg: 106.27 Km/H
Dry Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
Reference Summer
109.90 Km/H
Reference All Season
107.70 Km/H
Hankook Winter i cept RS2
107.60 Km/H
Gislaved Euro Frost 6
106.60 Km/H
Yokohama BluEarth Winter V905
106.50 Km/H
Vredestein Snowtrac 5
106.50 Km/H
Michelin Alpin 5
106.40 Km/H
Dunlop Winter Sport 5
106.40 Km/H
Falken Eurowinter HS01
106.40 Km/H
Goodyear UltraGrip 9
106.30 Km/H
Barum Polaris 3
106.20 Km/H
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
106.20 Km/H
Kleber Krisalp HP3
106.10 Km/H
Continental WinterContact TS 860
106.00 Km/H
Debica Frigo HP2
106.00 Km/H
Nokian WR D4
105.70 Km/H
Firestone Winterhawk 3
105.60 Km/H
Matador MP 92 Sibir Snow
105.60 Km/H
Pirelli Cinturato Winter
105.20 Km/H
Bridgestone Blizzak LM001 EVO
105.10 Km/H
Uniroyal MS Plus 77
105.10 Km/H
Semperit Master Grip 2
104.80 Km/H
Wet
Wet performance is a key factor for UK winters, so these are the most important results in the test. Both Bridgestone and Continental were the standouts of wet braking, with Dunlop, Fulda and Hankook extremely close.
Wet Braking
Spread: 3.90 M (11.4%)|Avg: 36.08 M
Wet braking in meters (Lower is better)
Wet Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre
Continental and Hankook were the two brands that managed to score consistently in the wet grip tests.
Wet Handling
Spread: 5.30 Km/H (7.3%)|Avg: 71.03 Km/H
Wet Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
Continental WinterContact TS 860
72.80 Km/H
Pirelli Cinturato Winter
72.50 Km/H
Reference Summer
72.30 Km/H
Hankook Winter i cept RS2
72.20 Km/H
Uniroyal MS Plus 77
72.10 Km/H
Dunlop Winter Sport 5
72.10 Km/H
Semperit Master Grip 2
72.10 Km/H
Reference All Season
71.90 Km/H
Goodyear UltraGrip 9
71.80 Km/H
Michelin Alpin 5
71.50 Km/H
Kleber Krisalp HP3
71.40 Km/H
Bridgestone Blizzak LM001 EVO
71.10 Km/H
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
71.10 Km/H
Yokohama BluEarth Winter V905
70.90 Km/H
Falken Eurowinter HS01
70.50 Km/H
Vredestein Snowtrac 5
70.50 Km/H
Debica Frigo HP2
70.20 Km/H
Nokian WR D4
69.70 Km/H
Matador MP 92 Sibir Snow
69.60 Km/H
Barum Polaris 3
69.50 Km/H
Gislaved Euro Frost 6
69.30 Km/H
Firestone Winterhawk 3
67.50 Km/H
Continental once again proved its wet consistency with a third wet podium in the straight aquaplaning testing.
Straight Aqua
Spread: 13.20 Km/H (14.9%)|Avg: 80.81 Km/H
Float Speed in Km/H (Higher is better)
Falken Eurowinter HS01
88.30 Km/H
Continental WinterContact TS 860
86.40 Km/H
Bridgestone Blizzak LM001 EVO
84.80 Km/H
Michelin Alpin 5
83.80 Km/H
Reference Summer
83.60 Km/H
Uniroyal MS Plus 77
83.50 Km/H
Pirelli Cinturato Winter
83.50 Km/H
Goodyear UltraGrip 9
83.30 Km/H
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
81.30 Km/H
Hankook Winter i cept RS2
81.00 Km/H
Kleber Krisalp HP3
80.60 Km/H
Dunlop Winter Sport 5
80.60 Km/H
Yokohama BluEarth Winter V905
80.30 Km/H
Reference All Season
79.60 Km/H
Semperit Master Grip 2
79.50 Km/H
Vredestein Snowtrac 5
79.40 Km/H
Firestone Winterhawk 3
79.20 Km/H
Nokian WR D4
76.80 Km/H
Debica Frigo HP2
76.40 Km/H
Barum Polaris 3
75.60 Km/H
Matador MP 92 Sibir Snow
75.20 Km/H
Gislaved Euro Frost 6
75.10 Km/H
Snow
It will come as no surprise the summer tyre struggled in the snow testing, with dangerous / unusable levels of performance. During snow braking Goodyear lead, but the results were close overall.
Snow Braking
Spread: 16.20 M (60%)|Avg: 28.73 M
Snow braking in meters (Lower is better)
Snow Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre
Snow handling once again had the Goodyear leading, with both the Pirelli and Nokian also consistent across the two tests.
Snow Handling
Spread: 25.20 Km/H (47.7%)|Avg: 50.51 Km/H
Snow handling average speed (Higher is better)
Goodyear UltraGrip 9
52.80 Km/H
Nokian WR D4
52.70 Km/H
Pirelli Cinturato Winter
52.60 Km/H
Kleber Krisalp HP3
52.30 Km/H
Hankook Winter i cept RS2
52.20 Km/H
Barum Polaris 3
52.00 Km/H
Semperit Master Grip 2
52.00 Km/H
Continental WinterContact TS 860
51.90 Km/H
Uniroyal MS Plus 77
51.80 Km/H
Firestone Winterhawk 3
51.80 Km/H
Vredestein Snowtrac 5
51.70 Km/H
Falken Eurowinter HS01
51.60 Km/H
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
51.60 Km/H
Matador MP 92 Sibir Snow
51.50 Km/H
Dunlop Winter Sport 5
51.50 Km/H
Gislaved Euro Frost 6
51.40 Km/H
Debica Frigo HP2
51.00 Km/H
Michelin Alpin 5
50.60 Km/H
Yokohama BluEarth Winter V905
50.40 Km/H
Bridgestone Blizzak LM001 EVO
50.20 Km/H
Reference All Season
50.10 Km/H
Reference Summer
27.60 Km/H
Environment
Nokian and Goodyear continued the strong results in the rolling resistance tests, with the Nokian having a huge advantage in fuel use.
Rolling Resistance
Spread: 2.18 kg / t (31.3%)|Avg: 8.38 kg / t
Rolling resistance in kg t (Lower is better)
Nokian WR D4
6.96 kg / t
Goodyear UltraGrip 9
7.63 kg / t
Continental WinterContact TS 860
8.01 kg / t
Bridgestone Blizzak LM001 EVO
8.03 kg / t
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
8.06 kg / t
Barum Polaris 3
8.11 kg / t
Reference All Season
8.15 kg / t
Dunlop Winter Sport 5
8.17 kg / t
Yokohama BluEarth Winter V905
8.32 kg / t
Vredestein Snowtrac 5
8.43 kg / t
Kleber Krisalp HP3
8.48 kg / t
Reference Summer
8.48 kg / t
Semperit Master Grip 2
8.49 kg / t
Uniroyal MS Plus 77
8.49 kg / t
Gislaved Euro Frost 6
8.49 kg / t
Debica Frigo HP2
8.58 kg / t
Firestone Winterhawk 3
8.66 kg / t
Matador MP 92 Sibir Snow
8.68 kg / t
Pirelli Cinturato Winter
8.88 kg / t
Falken Eurowinter HS01
9.03 kg / t
Hankook Winter i cept RS2
9.13 kg / t
Michelin Alpin 5
9.14 kg / t
19,000 km
£1.45/L
8.0 L/100km
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Annual Difference
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Lifetime Savings
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Extra Fuel/Energy
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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.
The noise testing highlighted the fact many winter tyres are now quieter than their summer counterparts.
Noise
Spread: 3.60 dB (5.6%)|Avg: 66.65 dB
External noise in dB (Lower is better)
Bridgestone Blizzak LM001 EVO
64.80 dB
Kleber Krisalp HP3
64.80 dB
Pirelli Cinturato Winter
65.60 dB
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
65.60 dB
Semperit Master Grip 2
65.60 dB
Reference All Season
65.70 dB
Debica Frigo HP2
66.00 dB
Matador MP 92 Sibir Snow
66.20 dB
Continental WinterContact TS 860
66.30 dB
Falken Eurowinter HS01
66.30 dB
Dunlop Winter Sport 5
66.40 dB
Nokian WR D4
66.40 dB
Yokohama BluEarth Winter V905
66.50 dB
Firestone Winterhawk 3
67.30 dB
Goodyear UltraGrip 9
67.40 dB
Gislaved Euro Frost 6
67.40 dB
Vredestein Snowtrac 5
67.70 dB
Hankook Winter i cept RS2
67.80 dB
Reference Summer
67.80 dB
Barum Polaris 3
68.20 dB
Michelin Alpin 5
68.20 dB
Uniroyal MS Plus 77
68.40 dB
Value
As we’ve seen with other Michelin patterns, the Alpin 5 had a clear lead in wear testing, which made them the best value tyre on test. Hankook also proved to be a very low wear tyre, which when combined with the lower purchase price, proved to be as equally good value as the Michelin.
Excellent all rounder with excellent winter performance. High steering precision and dynamic handling on snow and in the wet, good comfort, low rolling resistance.
I don't get it. How snow tyres can be 27 meters in snow braking meanwhile all-season tyres in snow braking is 16.9 meters. So... with these tests all-season tyres are better then winter tyres? Can someone explain it to me?
Just trying to figure out the distance of snow braking by Gislaved Euro Frost 6 vs Michelin CrossClimate2 and how worse all-season tyres are. But i'm confused now. It can't be that All-season tyres have better snow braking.
The all season tyre was better than ONE winter tyre in this test (from 2018) so I'm not sure what's confusing. There's bad winter tyres and good all season tyres
How so? Take for example the worst all-season tyre Vredestein (18.08 meters) and compare to the best winter tyre GoodYear Ultragrip (27 meters). So.. even the worst all-season tyre outperformed the best winter tyre by 9 meters shorter distance? Maybe i'm not understanding something.
Okey i think i got it. Numbers are just wrong in 2018 winter braking, cuz in your youtube video results seem fine and 2021 winter tyre results are also fine.
I'm looking at this page above. 2018 winter tyre snow braking. Best tyre is 27 meters. And then i'm looking at 2021 all-season tyres. Best tyre at snow braking is 16.91 meters. And for example 2021 best winter tyre is 15.67 meters. You sure it's correct numbers in 2018? 27 meters was the best? Just scroll up and check snow braking. If it's correct then it means over 3 years tyres have improved alot. Hopefully now you understood ?
Yeah i didn't understand at first sorry. I thought both tests are yours. Cheers ? still would be interesting to see gislaved euro frost 6 vs. michelin crossclimate 2 but i'm sure difference wouldn't be big anyways.
Can't believe I missed the Kleber! Just fallen for the tread pattern, looking at tests and reviews to try and put myself off has conversely resulted in me wishing to advertise a kidney on ebay..... No winter suitable tyres this year leaves me feeling vulnerable. Anybody want a kidney? :-) I know, Im sad, I should covet X-boxes or something, but im afraid tyres are much more desirable.... :-/
Hi All, From the data on the winter tyres it seems that they could be used all season - would you say that this would be OK? - certainly from a cost basis - it would save money!
I appreciate that - as the results of the Auto Bild test had the 20 tyres cost from £64.70 to £41.60 - the older test of all season I understood to be £138 plus on those tested! If you can point me to the All season tyre at the £40 to £60 mark I'd be pleased. BUT I wonder if you could say that the winter tyre CAN be used all year safely or NOT?
Yes I see - was just checking the comparison and my size at 17" are significantly more than the 13" which matches the quoted price on this article. Will continue to check through and make a decision on balance between the All season and Winter as I go!
Hi there - I have been enjoying your videos on Youtube and have now subscribed. This is the first year that I am planning on running a dedicated winter tyre on a mk7 Golf R. The challenge I am finding is that a lot of the tyres don't come in 235/35/19 - which is a fairly common performance size. The new Conti 860p does not come in that size, but I am thinking of plumping for the older Conti 850p (quite expensive for an older tyre though). I have yet to find any winter tryre test reviews for this size, but thought I would see if you have any views or thoughts.
Hi John, I have a question and you're probably the only one that can get an answer. As you know, manufacturers sell brand new "old" model tyre. For example Conti WinterContact TS830P is still sold today in some dimensions, DOT XX18, even if the model is very old. How does this tyre compound compare to original compound from years ago when this model was introduced? I'm sure it was updated... What do you think? Is this comparable to say TS850P? Thanks!
The compounds do get updated, but there's no guarantee that it has been updated. Usually the newer tyre is the better option as they have more advanced tread patterns and constructions.
The logical reply is: The current compound is the same or potentially improved, as this is usually not explicitly commented and you would need to ask the producer directly.
Seems to me they've placed too much emphasis on rolling resistance, looking at the graphs the Hankook is a bloody exceptional tyre, yet it ended up quite low down. I can only see the rolling resistance weighting causing this, yet, the economy difference is very slight in real terms, and surely the significant safety benefits offered are of more importance in the winter...
I don't get it. How snow tyres can be 27 meters in snow braking meanwhile all-season tyres in snow braking is 16.9 meters. So... with these tests all-season tyres are better then winter tyres? Can someone explain it to me?
Just trying to figure out the distance of snow braking by Gislaved Euro Frost 6 vs Michelin CrossClimate2 and how worse all-season tyres are. But i'm confused now. It can't be that All-season tyres have better snow braking.
The all season tyre was better than ONE winter tyre in this test (from 2018) so I'm not sure what's confusing. There's bad winter tyres and good all season tyres
How so? Take for example the worst all-season tyre Vredestein (18.08 meters) and compare to the best winter tyre GoodYear Ultragrip (27 meters). So.. even the worst all-season tyre outperformed the best winter tyre by 9 meters shorter distance? Maybe i'm not understanding something.
Okey i think i got it. Numbers are just wrong in 2018 winter braking, cuz in your youtube video results seem fine and 2021 winter tyre results are also fine.
Not sure what you're looking at but this is the snow braking result
https://uploads.disquscdn.c...
I'm looking at this page above. 2018 winter tyre snow braking. Best tyre is 27 meters. And then i'm looking at 2021 all-season tyres. Best tyre at snow braking is 16.91 meters. And for example 2021 best winter tyre is 15.67 meters. You sure it's correct numbers in 2018? 27 meters was the best? Just scroll up and check snow braking. If it's correct then it means over 3 years tyres have improved alot. Hopefully now you understood ?
Different conditions and speeds, you can't compare between tests
Yeah i didn't understand at first sorry. I thought both tests are yours. Cheers ? still would be interesting to see gislaved euro frost 6 vs. michelin crossclimate 2 but i'm sure difference wouldn't be big anyways.
It could be that i'm comparing auto bild results to your results. Auto bild results seem very different than yours. Maybe that's the issue.
Looking for advice on 225/55 19 winter tyre for SUV Xtrail. In Yorkshire but drive to Germany and Switzerland in winter.
All the usual suspects work well in the SUV sizes :)
Can't believe I missed the Kleber! Just fallen for the tread pattern, looking at tests and reviews to try and put myself off has conversely resulted in me wishing to advertise a kidney on ebay..... No winter suitable tyres this year leaves me feeling vulnerable. Anybody want a kidney? :-)
I know, Im sad, I should covet X-boxes or something, but im afraid tyres are much more desirable.... :-/
Hi All, From the data on the winter tyres it seems that they could be used all season - would you say that this would be OK? - certainly from a cost basis - it would save money!
I'll answer with a question - if you want an all season tyre, why not fit an all season tyre?
I suppose its more to do with the latter part of my comment - they cost 3x as much!
A good all season and a good winter tyre are pretty much priced the same!
I appreciate that - as the results of the Auto Bild test had the 20 tyres cost from £64.70 to £41.60 - the older test of all season I understood to be £138 plus on those tested! If you can point me to the All season tyre at the £40 to £60 mark I'd be pleased. BUT I wonder if you could say that the winter tyre CAN be used all year safely or NOT?
I would guess those two tests tested different sizes hence the different prices shown...
Yes I see - was just checking the comparison and my size at 17" are significantly more than the 13" which matches the quoted price on this article. Will continue to check through and make a decision on balance between the All season and Winter as I go!
Hi there - I have been enjoying your videos on Youtube and have now subscribed. This is the first year that I am planning on running a dedicated winter tyre on a mk7 Golf R. The challenge I am finding is that a lot of the tyres don't come in 235/35/19 - which is a fairly common performance size. The new Conti 860p does not come in that size, but I am thinking of plumping for the older Conti 850p (quite expensive for an older tyre though). I have yet to find any winter tryre test reviews for this size, but thought I would see if you have any views or thoughts.
Cheers
Jon
Thanks for the kind words. In that size my money would go to Conti, Goodyear or Michelin, can't really go wrong with any of the big three!
Hi John, I have a question and you're probably the only one that can get an answer.
As you know, manufacturers sell brand new "old" model tyre. For example Conti WinterContact TS830P is still sold today in some dimensions, DOT XX18, even if the model is very old.
How does this tyre compound compare to original compound from years ago when this model was introduced? I'm sure it was updated... What do you think? Is this comparable to say TS850P? Thanks!
The compounds do get updated, but there's no guarantee that it has been updated. Usually the newer tyre is the better option as they have more advanced tread patterns and constructions.
Thanks! I know that newer tyre is better, it's just that some tyres are only available as older models in certain dimensions
The logical reply is: The current compound is the same or potentially improved, as this is usually not explicitly commented and you would need to ask the producer directly.
What is known more general is the models comparison, e.g. here: http://www.tyrereviews.co.u...
or here: https://www.continental-tyr...
Would be useful if you can mention what kind of rare dimension you have that you can't find newer model than TS 830P...curious!
Plus don't forget that newest successor for the UHP category from the given producer is http://www.tyrereviews.co.u...
Hope this helps.
Seems to me they've placed too much emphasis on rolling resistance, looking at the graphs the Hankook is a bloody exceptional tyre, yet it ended up quite low down. I can only see the rolling resistance weighting causing this, yet, the economy difference is very slight in real terms, and surely the significant safety benefits offered are of more importance in the winter...
I agree, but 5th overall is still an excellent result for Hankook!
Oh indeed!