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Can You Mix Tyres Across Axles?

Jonathan Benson
Written by Jonathan Benson
1 min read Updated
By now, we should all know that you should never mix tyres on the same axle, but people often wonder whether it's a good idea to mix different brands of tyres between the front and rear of the car.
 
To find out, I started with all four tyres the same premium Continental SportContact 6, then switched to another premium brand (Michelin Pilot Sport 4S) rear tyre, then a midrange kumho PS91 rear tyre, then a budget rear tyre.
 
These are the results of what changed in both subjective handling, and wet lap times. 
 

 

Discussion

9 comments
  1. Dalibor Pejcic archived

    i need advice. I have 2 tyres michelin alpin 4 two year old and new 2 tyres goodyear 9+. The car is astra g caravan . Should I put new tyres front or back for winter season. Thanks for Your time.

    #5433
  2. RG archived

    I have a 535 with mixed sizes 245/45/R18 fronts and 275/40/R18 rears. I cant find a matching front and rear set so can get PS4 fronts and PSS rear or GYA5 front GYSS rear. What would you recommend?

    #5027
    1. TyreReviews RG archived

      Without testing each combination it's nearly impossible to know which would be best. Neither seem great as both will have a softer sidewalled tyre on the steer axle.

      #5029
      1. RG TyreReviews archived

        Would either be better than the GYA3 all round?

        #5030
        1. TyreReviews RG archived

          Again, we'd have to test to really find out, that's a really tricky question! I wouldn't be surprised if you can get the GYSS in your front size soon, it might be worth asking goodyear.

          #5031
  3. cenuijmu archived

    Good video as always.

    My 9 year old MX5 NC has, got a horrible mixture of tyres on it. 7 year old Bridgestone OEM tyres on the back, one Michelin Supersport on the front ( no longer made ) and one Nexen N Fera that the local Mazda dealership put on af the last MOT :( I don't drive fast nowadays but even so, horrible combination.

    I once had Michelin PS3's (205/16) on a Yaris diesel at the dront and found some old Yokohama Parada spec 2's in the garage on the back. In in the rain it would oversteer on any corner. I once did a 45 degree spin in front of a granny at a roundabout when I didn't manage to catch it in time. Most oversteery Yaris ever.

    The old Yokohama A520 tyres were the best tyre ever in the dry,. the worst ever in even 1mm of snow

    #5010
  4. paul brockley archived

    Silly question i am sure, but would it have been worth getting a time of the mid and budget range tyres on both the front and back as a point of comparison?
    i.e. kumho on front and back, then budget tyres on both front and back.

    I know you can't go back and do the tests now, but just curious if they were done and not shown.

    #4995
    1. TyreReviews paul brockley archived

      If you check a few videos ago, it's been done as part of the big uuhp tyre test :)

      #5005
      1. paul brockley TyreReviews archived

        Apologies. Obvious now, but didn't realise that it was the same track and tyre.

        So the mid ranged mixed tyres were 2 seconds a lap slower than a full set of mid ranged tyres.
        Really does show that if you get a car with cheap tyres you are better to wait and get a full set of premium than to only change the front or back when wear reaches a point.

        #5007