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2017 AMS Performance 18 inch Winter Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
6 min read Updated

Adjust Result Weighting

The overall scores below are calculated using our weighting system. Since the original publication may use a different scoring methodology that wasn't shared, these results may differ from their published rankings. You can adjust the weightings below to explore how different priorities affect the results.
Dry 20%
Wet 35%
Snow 30%
Comfort 5%
Value 10%
Dry 20% · Wet 35% · Snow 30% · Comfort 5% · Value 10%
Fine-tune sub-categories
Dry
Wet
Snow
Comfort
Value

Test Results Data

BEST Good Average Below Average
# Tyre Total Score Dry Wet Snow Comfort Value
Braking M Handling Km/H % Braking M Handling Km/H Straight Aqua Km/H % Braking M Handling Km/H % Noise dB % Rolling Resistance kg / t %
1 Continental WinterContact TS 850 P 98.2% 45.6 3 118.9 2 98.9% 33.9 76.2 85 99.7% 28.2 54.9 98.6% 73.4 98.6% 8.2 2 93.9%
2 Dunlop Winter Sport 5 97.6% 45.9 118.2 98.3% 34.5 2 74.7 2 86.1 98.2% 27.7 55.5 100% 73 99.2% 8.6 89.5%
3 Semperit Speed Grip 3 95.9% 46.6 117.5 97.2% 36.8 72 81.3 93.3% 28.1 3 55.4 2 99.2% 72.4 100% 8.2 2 93.9%
4 Michelin Pilot Alpin 4 95.8% 46.5 117.2 97.2% 35.7 3 73.8 85.8 96.1% 28.7 55.3 98.2% 72.5 2 99.9% 9 85.6%
5 Pirelli Winter Sottozero 3 95.1% 45.7 117.1 98% 36 74 3 87.4 2 96.1% 29.7 54.8 96.2% 73.3 98.8% 9.2 83.7%
6 ▼1 Fulda Kristall Control HP2 95% 47.7 116.9 95.9% 37.6 71.4 87.6 92.8% 27.8 2 55.4 2 99.7% 72.9 99.3% 8.8 87.5%
7 ▼2 Nokian WR A4 94.9% 44.6 119 100% 37.8 69.9 80.5 90.8% 30 53.8 94.8% 72.7 3 99.6% 7.7 100%
8 ▲1 Kumho WinterCraft WP71 94.5% 45.4 2 115.9 97.8% 35.9 71.9 84.9 94.7% 28.5 54.5 97.7% 72.7 3 99.6% 9.8 78.6%
9 ▼1 Hankook Winter i cept evo2 94.1% 46.8 118.7 3 97.5% 38 71.4 85.9 92.2% 29.3 54.5 96.5% 73.3 98.8% 8.8 87.5%
10 Cooper Weather Master SA2 Plus 92.9% 47.1 115.3 95.8% 37 72.2 86.5 3 93.8% 29.9 53.5 94.7% 73.2 98.9% 9.7 79.4%
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Dry 99% Wet 100% Snow 99% Comfort 99% Value 94%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 45.6 M 3
Dry Handling 118.9 Km/H 2
Wet
Wet Braking 33.9 M
Wet Handling 76.2 Km/H
Straight Aqua 85 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 28.2 M
Snow Handling 54.9 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 73.4 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 8.2 kg / t 2
Dry 98% Wet 98% Snow 100% Comfort 99% Value 90%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 45.9 M
Dry Handling 118.2 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 34.5 M 2
Wet Handling 74.7 Km/H 2
Straight Aqua 86.1 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 27.7 M
Snow Handling 55.5 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 73 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 8.6 kg / t
Dry 97% Wet 93% Snow 99% Comfort 100% Value 94%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 46.6 M
Dry Handling 117.5 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 36.8 M
Wet Handling 72 Km/H
Straight Aqua 81.3 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 28.1 M 3
Snow Handling 55.4 Km/H 2
Comfort
Noise 72.4 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 8.2 kg / t 2
Dry 97% Wet 96% Snow 98% Comfort 100% Value 86%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 46.5 M
Dry Handling 117.2 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 35.7 M 3
Wet Handling 73.8 Km/H
Straight Aqua 85.8 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 28.7 M
Snow Handling 55.3 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 72.5 dB 2
Value
Rolling Resistance 9 kg / t
Dry 98% Wet 96% Snow 96% Comfort 99% Value 84%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 45.7 M
Dry Handling 117.1 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 36 M
Wet Handling 74 Km/H 3
Straight Aqua 87.4 Km/H 2
Snow
Snow Braking 29.7 M
Snow Handling 54.8 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 73.3 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 9.2 kg / t
Dry 96% Wet 93% Snow 100% Comfort 99% Value 88%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 47.7 M
Dry Handling 116.9 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 37.6 M
Wet Handling 71.4 Km/H
Straight Aqua 87.6 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 27.8 M 2
Snow Handling 55.4 Km/H 2
Comfort
Noise 72.9 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 8.8 kg / t
7
94.9%
Dry 100% Wet 91% Snow 95% Comfort 100% Value 100%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 44.6 M
Dry Handling 119 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 37.8 M
Wet Handling 69.9 Km/H
Straight Aqua 80.5 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 30 M
Snow Handling 53.8 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 72.7 dB 3
Value
Rolling Resistance 7.7 kg / t
8
94.5%
Dry 98% Wet 95% Snow 98% Comfort 100% Value 79%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 45.4 M 2
Dry Handling 115.9 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 35.9 M
Wet Handling 71.9 Km/H
Straight Aqua 84.9 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 28.5 M
Snow Handling 54.5 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 72.7 dB 3
Value
Rolling Resistance 9.8 kg / t
Dry 98% Wet 92% Snow 97% Comfort 99% Value 88%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 46.8 M
Dry Handling 118.7 Km/H 3
Wet
Wet Braking 38 M
Wet Handling 71.4 Km/H
Straight Aqua 85.9 Km/H
Snow
Snow Braking 29.3 M
Snow Handling 54.5 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 73.3 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 8.8 kg / t
Dry 96% Wet 94% Snow 95% Comfort 99% Value 79%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 47.1 M
Dry Handling 115.3 Km/H
Wet
Wet Braking 37 M
Wet Handling 72.2 Km/H
Straight Aqua 86.5 Km/H 3
Snow
Snow Braking 29.9 M
Snow Handling 53.5 Km/H
Comfort
Noise 73.2 dB
Value
Rolling Resistance 9.7 kg / t
Not every driver has the same priorities. Adjust the category weightings above to re-rank the tyres based on what matters most to your driving style.
Scores are colour-coded from red (weakest) through yellow to green (strongest) to help you quickly spot each tyre's strengths and weaknesses.
The original test ranking is shown in the # column. Arrows indicate how each tyre moves when your custom weighting is applied.

Discussion

17 comments
  1. Pipa Cacao archived

    I had to register my utter disappointment with Nokian WR4!!
    Both the "2017 Sport Auto Winter Tyre Test" & "AMS Performance 18 inch Winter Tyre Test" were right on the spot with the scores.
    The WR4 are horrible on the wet surfaces!! I have a TT Mk3 and driving it on a highway at any levels of rain is utter horror show. I constantly get the feeling that the car is "floating" (aquaplaning). Overtaking anyone on a wet road is like driving on ice. Even on the dry surfaces, the tyres seem to force the car to "wander". You have to constantly make small steering wheel adjustments in order to have the car go straight. At first I thought that this was due to possible road imperfections" but now I know better.

    VERDICT: "Not recommended"
    Since people rarely drive fast & crazy during the winter, I recommend any other tyre. They might be good on dry, however in most places winter is mostly wet and icy than just being outright cold and dry. Get a tyre with good wet & snow stats.

    #3572
    1. TyreReviews Pipa Cacao archived

      You will find a feeling this this with any new winter tyres on a car like the TT. The extra siping and blocks of winter tyres cause the car to feel imprecise when compared to a summer tyre.

      #3575
      1. Pipa Cacao TyreReviews archived

        Probably, however I do have them for 2 years now. Granted they haven't done a big mileage with them but still. The tyres should have been worn in by now. Very disappointed in them in general. Aquaplanning is also dangerously bad, even in perfect conditions. I thought that my inexperience with a sports car was to blame for my feeling of "lack of control and stability" 2 years in and I still cant shake the feeling of pure inadequacy of the tyres.

        I actually had a slide as I was driving in Vienna at a roundabout. I started understeer in the middle of my turn. I wasn't even driving fast. Thank god my Quattro system and the fact that no cars were on the road made it possible to get out of the situation with no causalities.

        What you say is possible. But the way the tyres act is on the point with what both tests say. Very good website both your "Tyre Reviews" and the testing link choices! Bravo!

        #3579
        1. TyreReviews Pipa Cacao archived

          Thanks for the kind words :) I hope your next set of tyres are better! Maybe look at something like the CrossClimate as a winter tyre, much less block movement.

          #3580
  2. Bruno archived

    I dont understand this :
    - Quitetest tyre on test: Kumho WinterCraft WP71
    - Negative: increased noise level

    ??

    #3035
    1. TyreReviews Bruno archived

      The "Quietest tyre on test" section is automatically generated based on the numeric score given to the tyre in the results.

      If you look at the graph, the top 4 tyres in the noise test were classified as the best, even though tyres 2, 3 and 4 were louder than the best.

      #3036
  3. John H archived

    I don't understand how Semperit is the best tire on show when Dunlop was first also on Braking and handling in the snow...

    #2878
    1. TyreReviews John H archived

      The full test included snow traction, and potentially a snow circle, which is why the magazine concluded the Semperit was the strongest overall in the snow.

      #2880
  4. Diki archived

    Hankook is really so bad? Users are not complaining...

    #2870
    1. Frontschleuder Diki archived

      Bad in ...? My experience is, Hankook and other Tyres in this priceclass are not bad everywhere, but it´s not balanced like the Top-Tyres. The Hankook is still good in snow and dry, but weaker in wet. I have the feeling Hankook change every year the tyre, still looking for a good balance.

      And the biggest problem with satisfied customers: They compare her old, hardened, low thread tyre with the new tyre. If they were not satisfied with the new tyre, how bad it is?

      #2871
    2. TyreReviews Diki archived

      This test highlighted a weakness under wet braking which caused Hankook to have a poor result.

      #2874
  5. 4cvg archived

    ' ... opposing design qualities of wet grip and wet aquaplaning ... '

    Different, yes but not opposing, I suggest.

    Straight aquaplaning is a function of the tread's capacity to transmit &/or store water.

    Wet grip (in merely slick circumstances) is a function of compounding & siping.

    It is quite possible for a tyre to have efficient channelling & to _also_ be well compounded/siped for the wet. It is obviously also possible for only one of these to be present.

    A better candidate for _opposing_ design demands would be _dry_ grip & aquaplaning (given the former's demands for a high land/sea ratio date latter's demands for a low one).

    cheers! Peter

    #2866
    1. TyreReviews 4cvg archived

      While I agree the dry example is a better example, as you point out, in low water conditions compounding is extremely important, and the more you have in contact with the surface the better.

      Michelin actually run a slick intermediate tyre in Le Mans!

      #2868
      1. 4cvg TyreReviews archived

        I think that it depends on whether we talk of a mere film or something a bit more (but less than streaming) & on the road surface (smooth concrete or a surface with more peaks & troughs in it).

        If a coarsish surface which has the potential for mechanical interlocking cum micro-interpenetration & which is merely slick with a film, then compound is king.
        If a smooth surface but also merely slick, then (sipes &) block edges become more important than on coarser surfaces for film penetration.
        If a coarsish surface with a bit more water (but still less than streaming), then a bit of clearing & storage of the water fosters the chances of compound-dependent micro-interpenetration cum interlocking at the rear part of the contact patch.
        If a smooth surface with that "more then slick, less than streaming" level of water, then clearing & storage to allow (sipes &) block edges & compound "give" at the rear of the contact patch to break the residual film become more important again.

        #2869
  6. Frontschleuder archived

    Positive: Short braking distance in the snow, good performance on dry and wet surfaces
    Negative: Relatively long braking distances and low lateral stability in snow

    Don´t understand this in "Negative". Fastest on snow handling, best in snow breaking.

    #2862
    1. TyreReviews Frontschleuder archived

      The long braking distances is for dry running. The magazine also tested average lateral acceleration (snow circle) which we didn't list, where the dunlop only scored 8th place.

      I will update the listings to make this clearer

      #2863
    2. Marus Frontschleuder archived

      The negative in this case is dry ruining and it can be a huge set back for the customer. There are locations were you have winters with 80% of snow on the surface you drive or surfaces are wet all the time in the temperature interval of + 5 to -5 where summer tires are not appropriate. (99% of 100% summer tires performs better on wet than winter ones). In my case I live in location where we have wet/snow/dry surfaces and constant changes therefore I cant make sacrifices to any of the stats.

      #2877