| Test Summary | |
| Wet Braking |
Michelin CrossClimate |
| Dry Braking |
Continental AllSeasonContact Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 |
| Wet Handling |
Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 Continental AllSeasonContact Kleber Quadraxer 2 |
| Rolling Resistance |
Continental AllSeasonContact |
| Noise |
Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2 Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason |
| Snow Braking |
Kleber Quadraxer 2 BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2 |
| Snow Handling |
Nexen N Blue 4 Season |
| Ice Braking |
Kleber Quadraxer 2 BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2 |
This is also the first test to include the new Continental AllSeasonContact tyre. The AllSeasonContact is Continentals first attempt at an all season tyre, and will be interesting to see how the German tyre performs against the established winter-bias Goodyear Vector 4Season Gen-2, and the UK favourite, summer-bias Michelin CrossClimate.
Dry
There are no prizes for guessing the best all season tyre in the dry. As the only summer-bias all season tyre on test, the Michelin CrossClimate wins both the dry braking and dry handling tests, but the new Continental AllSeasonContact is impressively close in second place. Both tyres beat the Goodyear Vector 4Seasons Gen-2 which finishes in third.
The summer and winter tyres behave as they should, with the summer tyre winning both tests, and the winter tyre placing last, highlighting how running winter tyres year round is not a sensible option for climates like the UK.
Wet
In the wet, the new Continental tyre continues its impressive first outing, fastest overall during wet handling, second place during wet braking and recording the best aquaplaning resistance. The established Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen-2 trades blows with the Continental, winning the wet braking test and second place during wet handling and aquaplaning, while the Michelin CrossClimate finishes a close third in all three tests.
Once again, the summer and winter tyres behave as you would expect, with the summer tyre amongst the best on test, and the winter tyre struggling in the warmer wet conditions.
Snow
Again, the new Continental AllSeasonContact proves Continental know how to make a tyre work in all conditions, winning both the snow braking and snow handling tests by a small margin. While Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen-2 manages to stay close to the Continental, the summer-bias Michelin CrossClimate loses out a little on the white stuff, but finsihes a still respectable mid table in both tests.
Unsurprisingly the summer tyre was essentually useless in these snow tests, but perhaps more surprisingly the winter tyre couldn't best the Continental around the snow handling track, or even out-brake the best all season tyres in the snow.
Value
While the new Continental might have seemed like the perfect tyre up until this point, the wear testing shows the German tyres weakness. The projected wear of the Continental was 17,000km less than the best tyre on test, and when you combine it with the high purchase price, it is the only tyre to push into the double digit "euros per 1,000km" scoring in the value category, making it by far the most expensive tyre on test. Please note, the reference summer and winter tyre were not tested for wear.
The Continental claws back some of its cost disadvantage with the lowest rolling resistance.
Results
What do you think about a nexen n blue on a bmw 320? Now I prefer the Nokian wr d4 (winter) with a lower handling than the uncomfortable Dunlop sport max RF (summer).
The nexen can be a half way, or like the Nokian?
You can see how the Nexen performs in this test compared to a winter and summer tyre above. It wouldn't be my first choice of all season tyre due to the drt grip, but it seems to be ok for its price point.
Thanks, I'm from Italy, here the difference between the nexen and other premium choice is at least 40€ (×4 160 for 225/50 r17), and if I pierce one it would be even more.
But the nexen have a low noise, but a low comfort? So if I need comfort and low noise the Goodyear is better... but the difference in price is about 55€ for each tire, and for the Michelin even more.
Is it a secret what reference tyres are?
Sadly for this test, yes. It will have been a premium winter tyre.
I really regret there is no Nokian Weatherproof in this test. Moreover I'm very curious about Continental AllSeasonsContact - is that really so good or does it have good results because it was German magazine which made tests? I was almost decided to buy GoodYear Vector 4Seasons but 1) it's not XL model which for SUV car can make small difference 2) I've found in Internet few stories about breaking this tyre - manufacturing defect? perhaps only for some short time but still it was something making me to afraid to buy it.
I wouldn't worry about any manufacturing issues with the Goodyear, I've not heard any reports. I also believe the Continental is as good as the magazine has made out, largely because the grip comes at the expense of wear.
Is the ranking updated?
2nd Michellin with 53pts, while:
Kleber Quadraxer 54,
BFGoodrich 55,
and so why is Goodyear no1 with 55pts, same as BFG?
Auto Bild weight apply category weighting to each of the results, which means for example a score in the wet is worth more than a score in cost.
This does leave the overall totals a little confusing, which is why we include all the key data in the charts above.
CrossClimate or CrossClimate + tested ?
I ride on the second placed tyres which doesn't seem bad.
Respect to Auto Build for the tests and of course the Value tests that complete the whole picture.
Thanks for the valuable review!
Pls. take a look at the total score calculations, especially in case of the Goodyear tyre, because dry result was taken 4 times (4x6 points), so actual result is 55 points, if I am right. Thanks!
Thank you for pointing that out, I'll get it fixed now :)
Great article. You know, I hope the Conti AllSeasonContact turns out to have better subjective feel than the Michelin Crossclimate. Wear may be more important to taxi drivers, but I expect subjective feel will trump everything for enthusiastic drivers. The UK market needs a premium sports all season tyre. I really want to put all season tyres with snow capability on to my hot hatch when the cold weather starts, but I'm not prepared to sacrifice fun to do it. Could this new Conti tyre be the one I've been waiting for???
Obviously without testing we don't actually know, but usually more sipes means more tread block movement which means worse subjective handling. I'm due to drive them in Feb 2018 which is a long while away, hopefully someone will leave a review before that time! :)
You may be surprised by the crossclimate!
I have given them a caning on a big diesel mpv driving it much more aggressively and quicker than it was designed for. As someone who hates sloppy tyres and poor subjective feel/handling, they have impressed me greatly. Put it this way, they are better, on the hottest of summer days, than conti eco 3, nokian line, and within an ace of primacy 3...
Well, the wear is still better than the reference winter and summer so I am happy that I choose the Conti's as I value the other criteria more (and the rolling resistance appears excellent which is important on an EV). Fitted to the rims but not on the car for another couple of weeks.
The summer and winter tyres weren't tested for wear, sadly the database system doesn't allow for blank values. I'll update the article to reflect this.
The Nexen for a cheaper tyre seem to work very well in every category except for aquaplaning,
But my question is regarding comfort, why do they score so low and what are the criterias for the comfort scoring?
Exactly, Nexen is quite quiet (best mark) and yet the tyre is marked comfort 2?
Why?
So still Goodyear is the best for central Europe :)
Conti has amazing traction on all surfaces, but wear is so disappointing... I'm wondering for who is that tyre, only for personns making around 5-8k kilometers per year.
If Auto Bild hadn't tested wear we'd have a very different opinion!
Since when goodyear is so good in dry braking? It used to be its weakest point. Except if there was an update of the tyre.