Continental have officially announced availability of the new Continental AllSeasonContact in the UK!
Could this be the Germans manufacturers answer to the hugely successful Michelin CrossClimate? We'll be sure to publish a full test as soon as we get try the new tyre, but for now here's the press release.
Continental launches AllSeasonContact
With the new AllSeasonContact, Continental is offering a tyre for urban use in moderate weather conditions. For this all-season tyre, Germany’s leading tyre manufacturer has come up with an innovative blend of tread design, compound, tyre contour and construction. In doing so, Continental has achieved a considerable reduction in the weaknesses previously present in the winter and wet- weather properties of tyres intended for all-year use, while at the same time the AllSeasonContact offers the best fuel efficiency in the premium segment for all-season tyres.
The new AllSeasonContact will be available from UK dealers from September. For the first year, Continental is starting out with 33 articles for rims from 14 to 18 inches and approved for speeds of up to 165 mph. As a tyre that is also suitable for use at colder times of year, it bears both the snowflake/alpine symbol and the M+S marking. On the EU tyre label the new Continental tyre scores a B rating for wet grip and rolling resistance. Continental sees the new AllSeasonContact as a tyre suitable for drivers who cover lower mileage and drive in and around urban areas in moderate weather conditions. For all other drivers, in the interests of maximum road safety Continental continues to recommend fitting tyres that have been specially developed for the relevant season.
The focus during development of the new AllSeasonContact was firmly on good winter-driving characteristics, safe handling in all weather conditions and excellent fuel efficiency. With a perfect balance between these individual tyre characteristics, the new directional tread all-rounder lines up alongside the other successful products in the Summer- and WinterContact family. For winter use, Continental’s chemists have developed a silica compound with a high proportion of resins for good grip on wet wintry and snow-covered roads. The high proportion of silica ensures good grip on wet roads while the composition of the resins, originating from the Cool Chili technology of the WinterContact TS 860, make for good grip on snow-covered roads. This adaptive compound enables the new tyre to match its adhesion to wet wintry and snow-covered roads – a key requirement for tyres intended for use all year round.
The tread design of the new AllSeasonContact also brings together proven elements of Continental’s premium summer and winter tyres which are noted for their safety. For example, the directional tread has been adopted from the current family of winter tyres. At the same time, the open tyre shoulders ensure good aquaplaning characteristics. The rigid pattern of the tread surface with its low number of sipes ensures precision handling and short braking distances on dry asphalt. These are characteristics more typical of summer tyres, which also need to deliver high levels of safety in the wet. The outcome is a tyre ideal for use in summer and winter conditions, especially in view of the fact that in Central European winters it rains one day in three.
In addition to its safe handling characteristics, the tyre’s construction has been designed to offer the best fuel efficiency in its class. This makes it particularly suitable for cost-conscious drivers who rarely need to drive in extreme weather conditions. To achieve this level of fuel efficiency, the tyre designers have created a perfect balance between material distribution, tyre geometry and material thickness. A comparison of tread depths illustrates this point: While a typical winter tyre has a tread depth between 8.5 and 9.5 millimeters, a typical summer tyre now has between 6.5 and 7.5 millimeters. The basic rule here is that low tread depth also makes for good fuel efficiency. So with its tread depth of 7.5 to 8.5 millimeters, the AllSeasonContact sits right between the two specialists. When combined with the optimised sidewall geometry, this guarantees very low rolling resistance, helping not only to save fuel, but also to ease the load on the environment.
Hi,
is there some news about this tires performance degradation?
very interesting something like your article "New-VS-4mm-VS-2mm-All-Season-Tyre-Performance"...
thankyou very much.
Only what the user reviews are saying, but the trends for siped tyres should stay relatively constant
HI, would these be suitable for an Audi TT Quattro based in the Northern Pennines that gets used all year round plus winter trips to Scotland
There's no reason you couldn't, assuming they make your size and load rating, however the car might not feel great in the summer if you use it as a sports car.
Hi,
I was going to purchase these for my e90 but they don't manafacture in 255 x 40 x 17. I then looked at alternatives like the Michelin cross climate + but again don't have my size tyre. Is there any other alternatives that are similar in performance as the 2 I mentioned? I'm looking for an all season tyre that favours more towards the summer tyre rather than the winter tyre.
Thanks.
As mentioned in the other comment, The Vredestein Quatrac 5 or Bridgestone AllWeather A005 are the other two options with more of a dry bias.
Nokian Z-line a/s
After driving "crossclimate" and "4seasonG" can confirm that this tire combines characteristics of Michelina and Goodyear.
In my car before the all year tires I had a continental summer and a special winter set.
It is not true that it is actually winter.
quite different in the summer than winter tires eg TS-830.
The feel of the steering wheel is better than that of Michelin and Goodyear.
The tire has a great traction on the snow and lateral stance as opposed to the trembling crossclimate.
Goodyear is more comfortable and quiet, the rest is about the same.
Continental, however, keeps the dry road better than goodyear.
All season contact is ts850 without sipping. look at it closely
You're right, the two tread patterns are very close to each other (other than sipes), but as it's a very well designed tread pattern there's no huge surprise. There's more to a tyre than tread, the compound and construction will almost certainly have been modified too.
compound must be modified for summer temps. propably it is harder
Hi,
I was going to purchase these for my e90 but they don't manafacture in 255 x 40 x 17. I then looked at alternatives like the Continental AllSeasonContact but again don't have my size tyre. Is there any other alternatives that are similar in performance as the 2 I mentioned? I'm looking for an all season tyre that favours more towards the summer tyre rather than the winter tyre.
Thanks.
Considering this tyre as a Southern England 'winter tyre' for a Kia Soul EV after wearing out some Sottozero 3's pretty fast, I have however seen a good deal on TS830P's and am undecided whether to wait for some proper tests of this tyre or 'grab a bargain'. The TS830P is only rated E for wet grip but the reviews of it seem very positive, any advice?
Having not seen any of the tests for this, or tested it myself, I sadly can't give you even an educated opinion :(
As soon as I get to drive it, it'll be on the site.
I would not be afraid to use Conti TS830P, actually I use their simpler version TS830 already 2 winter seasons only for our light VW Golf Mk VI 1.6 TDi and they are great also in the wet & do many km easily, so I would go for the bargain. P.S. It also depends on how many km you do per year with a more heavy EV.
Great to see some competition for the Michelin Crossclimate. I notice the above article says available up to 165MPH, but on Continental's UK website, they show all sizes available and none of them is available in over V speed rating (149 MPH). My car needs a minimum of W rating. Crossclimate is available in W rating in my size (205/50r17). I wonder if one of the reasons the Crossclimate has done so well, is that drivers of powerful vehicles don't want to invalidate their insurance in order to drive on winter/all season tyres. I know many people believe it is legal to move down one or two speed ratings on winter/all season tyres, but I've been unable to find that anywhere in writing.
Dropping the speed rating is perfectly legal and will not affect your insurance. This was confirmed by the ombudsman around 2011 when we had some really bad winters.
You must keep the original size and at least meet the load rating specified by your vehicle manufacturer, eg if 205/55 R16 91V is specified 205/55 R16 94V, and 205/55 R16 91H are perfectly legal
Good to know. Is that just winter time, or the whole year round?
Those rules apply to all tyres, not just all season / winter :)
Be interesting to see how this pans-out!
The main concern from a drivery-driver is 'optimised for urban driving over short distances' which suggests potentially poor dynamics out on the open road, an area where the crossclimate delivers great subjective behaviour...
I've updated the article to include the spider diagram, it looks like it sits between the CrossClimate and Vector 4Seasons Gen 2
Have you had a chance to drive this tyre yet mate? Considering it as a better cross season option than the TS850's maybe then I'll just run the P7's in the summer months.
Sadly not, but it has been featured in a test:
https://www.tyrereviews.co....