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2017 All Season VS Winter Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
7 min read Updated
Below are all the data points for the 2017 All Season VS Winter Tyre Test, displaying how each tyre performed across all test categories. The spider chart below provides a complete overview of performance, where one hundred percent represents the best performance in each category. The larger the area covered by each tyre's plot, the better its overall performance.
How to read these charts: For each test category, data is presented relative to the best performing tire. The direction indicates whether lower or higher values are better - pay close attention to this when interpreting results.

Performance Overview

This radar chart shows relative performance across all test categories, with 100% representing the best performance in each category. Reference tires may have gaps where data is not available.

Hankook Kinergy 4S
Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
Toyo Celsius
Michelin CrossClimate
Vredestein Quatrac 5
Nokian WeatherProof
BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
Continental WinterContact TS 860
Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2

Quick Navigation

Dry Performance Overview

Dry Braking (M)

Spread: 7.80 M (19.8%) | Avg: 44.73 M

Dry braking in meters (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Michelin CrossClimate with a result of 39.4 M. The difference between best and worst was 16.5%.
  1. Michelin CrossClimate
    39.4 M
  2. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    42.9 M
  3. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    43.8 M
  4. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    44.6 M
  5. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    45.1 M
  6. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    45.1 M
  7. Nokian WeatherProof
    45.3 M
  8. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    45.5 M
  9. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    46.4 M
  10. Toyo Celsius
    46.7 M
  11. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    47.2 M

Dry Handling (s)

Spread: 1.20 s (2%) | Avg: 60.33 s

Dry handling time in seconds (Lower is better)

Key Insight: All the tyres in the dry handling test finished less than 3% apart.
  1. Michelin CrossClimate
    59.7 s
  2. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    59.8 s
  3. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    60 s
  4. Toyo Celsius
    60.1 s
  5. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    60.1 s
  6. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    60.4 s
  7. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    60.4 s
  8. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    60.6 s
  9. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    60.7 s
  10. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    60.9 s
  11. Nokian WeatherProof
    60.9 s

Wet Performance Overview

Wet Braking (M)

Spread: 11.20 M (20.7%) | Avg: 59.82 M

Wet braking in meters (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 with a result of 54.1 M. The difference between best and worst was 17.2%.
  1. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    54.1 M
  2. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    54.1 M
  3. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    58.3 M
  4. Michelin CrossClimate
    58.4 M
  5. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    59.1 M
  6. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    59.5 M
  7. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    60.2 M
  8. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    61.1 M
  9. Nokian WeatherProof
    63.1 M
  10. Toyo Celsius
    64.8 M
  11. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    65.3 M

Wet Handling (s)

Spread: 4.10 s (4.6%) | Avg: 91.55 s

Wet handling time in seconds (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Continental WinterContact TS 860 with a result of 88.7 s. The difference between best and worst was 4.4%.
  1. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    88.7 s
  2. Michelin CrossClimate
    89.8 s
  3. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    90.9 s
  4. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    91.4 s
  5. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    91.5 s
  6. Toyo Celsius
    92.1 s
  7. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    92.4 s
  8. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    92.4 s
  9. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    92.5 s
  10. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    92.5 s
  11. Nokian WeatherProof
    92.8 s

Straight Aqua (Km/H)

Spread: 12.40 Km/H (16.7%) | Avg: 68.13 Km/H

Float Speed in Km/H (Higher is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Continental WinterContact TS 860 with a result of 74.3 Km/H. The difference between best and worst was 16.7%.
  1. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    74.3 Km/H
  2. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    71.7 Km/H
  3. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    71.1 Km/H
  4. Michelin CrossClimate
    69.9 Km/H
  5. Nokian WeatherProof
    69.5 Km/H
  6. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    67.9 Km/H
  7. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    66.6 Km/H
  8. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    66.2 Km/H
  9. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    66 Km/H
  10. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    64.3 Km/H
  11. Toyo Celsius
    61.9 Km/H

Snow Performance Overview

Snow Braking (M)

Spread: 3.70 M (17.5%) | Avg: 22.60 M

Snow braking in meters (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 with a result of 21.1 M. The difference between best and worst was 14.9%.
  1. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    21.1 M
  2. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    21.2 M
  3. Nokian WeatherProof
    21.4 M
  4. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    21.7 M
  5. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    21.8 M
  6. Michelin CrossClimate
    23 M
  7. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    23.3 M
  8. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    23.3 M
  9. Toyo Celsius
    23.4 M
  10. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    23.6 M
  11. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    24.8 M

Snow Handling (s)

Spread: 6.70 s (6.9%) | Avg: 101.18 s

Snow handling time in seconds (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Nokian WeatherProof with a result of 97 s. The difference between best and worst was 6.5%.
  1. Nokian WeatherProof
    97 s
  2. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    97.1 s
  3. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    98.4 s
  4. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    100.6 s
  5. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    101.1 s
  6. Toyo Celsius
    101.9 s
  7. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    102.9 s
  8. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    103.2 s
  9. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    103.5 s
  10. Michelin CrossClimate
    103.6 s
  11. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    103.7 s

Comfort Performance Overview

Noise (dB)

Spread: 2.00 dB (2.8%) | Avg: 71.64 dB

External noise in dB (Lower is better)

Key Insight: All the tyres in the noise test finished less than 3% apart.
  1. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    71 dB
  2. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    71 dB
  3. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    71 dB
  4. Toyo Celsius
    71 dB
  5. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    71 dB
  6. Michelin CrossClimate
    72 dB
  7. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    72 dB
  8. Nokian WeatherProof
    72 dB
  9. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    72 dB
  10. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    72 dB
  11. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    73 dB

Value Performance Overview

Rolling Resistance (kg / t)

Spread: 2.01 kg / t (25.9%) | Avg: 8.72 kg / t

Rolling resistance in kg t (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Nokian WeatherProof with a result of 7.77 kg / t. The difference between best and worst was 20.6%.
  1. Nokian WeatherProof
    7.77 kg / t
  2. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    7.87 kg / t
  3. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    8.16 kg / t
  4. BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2
    8.41 kg / t
  5. Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason
    8.63 kg / t
  6. Michelin CrossClimate
    8.67 kg / t
  7. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    8.75 kg / t
  8. Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert
    8.89 kg / t
  9. Toyo Celsius
    9.36 kg / t
  10. Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200
    9.64 kg / t
  11. Hankook Kinergy 4S
    9.78 kg / t

Overall Findings

Based on the weighted scoring from all tests, here are the overall results:

Position Tyre Score
Michelin CrossClimate 0%
2 Continental WinterContact TS 860 0%
3 Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2 0%
4 BFGoodrich g Grip All Season 2 0%
5 Nokian WeatherProof 0%
6 Uniroyal AllSeasonExpert 0%
7 Vredestein Quatrac 5 0%
8 Falken EUROALL SEASON AS200 0%
9 Pirelli Cinturato AllSeason 0%
10 Hankook Kinergy 4S 0%
11 Toyo Celsius 0%

Discussion

23 comments
  1. Piotr Lotto archived

    I live in central Poland (flat). During last 5 years We've only experienced rather harsh winter once. Usually snow lasts less than a month. It's more like wet and cold or very cold.
    I have a trouble with my Mazda mx5. Obviously I can't use HP summer tires (Michelin PS4) cause this would be absolutely lethal. I use Goodyear UG 8 performace, but it has plenty of disadvantages. The tradeoff in dry performance is noticeable. The real issue is that the car is very tail happy. This might be rather amusing, but it just kills the tires way too fast. During last winter I lost 5mm of tread. For this year I bought two new tires, but this solution is an enviromental and financial disaster, and I believe it is not worth it. The other issue is size (205/45/17) which strongly cuts availability of decent winter tires. I feel like manufacturers sort of gave up this size (UG8 performance debuted sth like 8 years ago).
    Take all of this into account, and I started to wonder if I can use all season tires instead of winter tires? For example "quatrac 5" cost half the money of my winter tires, and probably runs much better on dry/wet roads.
    So the question is:
    What would be your recommendation for performace/fun car that even in winter gives you this "fun" factor, and which does not have to be used in winter storms?
    Please take into account this horrible 205/45/17.

    #5427
    1. TyreReviews Piotr Lotto archived

      In that size the only thing close to a summer tyre is the CrossClimate+, but I'm not sure if that'll have the snow / ice grip you need

      #5428
      1. Piotr Lotto TyreReviews archived

        I bought crossclimate+ for my daily car (Fiat 500). This winter will show whether it was a crazy choice or not. But since I have those PilotSport4 for Mazda, I don't care THAT much for hot summer performance.
        My previous tires (for 500) were quatrac 3, and I was more than happy with them. The only issue was 25+ degrees celsius performance. That's why I was thinking about Vredesteins.....but 185 bhp RWD may be different than small Fiat ;)
        I have to make a choice for the next winter. There's no way I'll be paying for 2 expensive winter tires every single year.

        So if you were me would you stay with UG8 performance or switched to quatrac 5?

        #5429
        1. TyreReviews Piotr Lotto archived

          Honestly, I'm not sure there will be a huge difference. There's a new Quatrac 5 replacement due next year so if you can wait, I'd wait for that

          #5430
          1. Piotr Lotto TyreReviews archived

            Thank you for your opinion, which I highly value. So I'll wait.
            Thanks to your website and videos I chose both Michelins, and am happy with them.

            PS PilotSport4 is probably the best tire mx5 can ever get.

            #5431
            1. TyreReviews Piotr Lotto archived

              Thank you for the kind words, I'm glad you're getting on with your tyres :)

              #5432
  2. Malmboy archived

    I live in Lofoten islands, Northern Norway. Wet and relatively mild artic climate locally, yet icy roads mid winter. For late winter/early spring (Mid-late March to mid May) and late automn (october to end of november), I find it hard to decide whether or not to buy a set of Michelin CrossClimate / Continental Winter Contact TS 860. Local roads are really narrow with many unobtrusive and sharp curves. To me, ice and slush is a bigger concern than snow. I usually drive with "nordic" studded tyres from November 1 to May 1. As you probably know, studded tyres is not the king of dry or wet roads and because of the small margins on those narrow roads, I guess Michelin CrossClimate or Continental Winter Contact could be the answer. Question is, is it safe to drive on those tyres when I occasionally encounter ice or slushy (a blend of ice/water and snow) roads, typically in better parts of the road, in speed 46 to 50 mph?

    #3464
    1. TyreReviews Malmboy archived

      Without having experienced your climates it would be difficult to answer with a high level of accuracy, but in your scenario I'd certainly be looking at the TS860 rather than the CrossClimate as it has better ice performance. As I'm sure you're aware, the ice performance of a central european winter is nowhere near a studded tyre, so you would still need to be mindful when driving.

      #3467
      1. Malmboy TyreReviews archived

        Thank you! I have now looked into Continental WinterContact TS 860 and a review in Auto Express comparing all season tyres, CrossClimate and the TS 860. I have no doubt that WinterContact TS 860 is the best choice. I plan to use it from April to end of May and from September to end of October.

        Thank you again for pushing me in that direction (the TS860 rather than CrossClimate) :)

        #3471
        1. TyreReviews Malmboy archived

          No problem, glad you find the site useful :) Let me know how you find them!

          #3472
          1. Malmboy TyreReviews archived

            I finally decided to buy a set of Continental WinterContact TS 860 S. Not so many options in wheel sizes for my Subaru Outback. I know that the TS 860 S is a little bit more tweaked for performance on dry/wet and a little less on snow/ice. My intention is still not to replace my fantastic studded tyres (Nokian Hakkapeliitta 9) in winter. Just to increase security and peace of mind in spring and autumn. I plan to change to summer tyres in June, when the temperatures is higher.

            #3497
            1. TyreReviews Malmboy archived

              Let me know how you get on, you couldn't have picked a better Euro winter tyre for the job :)

              #3498
  3. grimreaper archived

    Shame that very few of these are Star Rated for use on BMW cars and therefore not compatible with the X-Drive system, which I suspect is a growing market.

    #3076
  4. Andy Holmes archived

    If you discount rolling resistance, which to be fair would be offset by price difference, the Falken AS200 is also a top-end tyre deserved of a higher position. Take the top 4 all season, find the results from the magazine and compare; Dry braking is its worst attribute but is below 1 meter longer compared to vector and comparable also to weatherproof, the wet braking is essentially the same as the crossclimate as is snow behaviour, whilst wet braking and handling are better than weatherproof, and wet handling better than the vector...

    #2941
    1. George Andy Holmes archived

      The only top end all season tyres are the CrossClimate and the Vector. Beacause they excel in some tests and are not very bad in others.
      You compare the Falken's dry braking with the Vector and the wet braking with the CrossClimate. In my opinion, that it's nonsense. Do it the other way around and you will find out why the Falken it's a mediocre tyre (as all the other tyres for that matter). Not terrible, but it is not especially good at anything.

      #2943
      1. Andy Holmes George archived

        Yes its a jack of all trades master of none.
        However what i was saying is that performance-wise its right in the thick of it, and compared differing fields because ALL the tyres have mixed behaviours across the spectrum. Take the higher ranking Uniroyal, its much worse in the dry and worse in the wet grip-wise, but picks up points for hydroplaning in the wet. The snow performance is better, but on the whole the Falken is a more balanced tyre than the Uniroyal for central europe/uk use.
        I was just raising the point that, rolling resistance aside which is more than offset by the price, tge falken is worth more consideration to purchasers than its 7th place may suggest.

        #2944
  5. Scherz Keks archived

    I have always told my friends. They didn´t believe me that AllSeason is not, what is written on the sidewall.

    AllSeason has to be choosed more carefully, by weighing the pros and cons of each tested tyre.

    Finally Continental has released their new AllSeason tyre. But just one fucking year to late for me. I have bought 8 new tyres.

    #2920
    1. TyreReviews Scherz Keks archived

      Looking at the tests, while the new Continental AllSeasonContact is a great performing tyre, it seems to have some issues with wear.

      #2923
  6. Nico Dupuis archived

    The Michelin tyre is CrossClimate + i think not CrossClimate.

    #2903
      1. TyreReviews George archived

        The Auto Bild test is CrossClimate+, though I've listed that one as CrossClimate too so I need to update that!

        #2908
  7. Thierry Priem archived

    Note: The BFGoodrich is 100% exactly the same tyre as the Kleber Quadraxer 2... I think it's the best choice given the fact it's quite a bit cheaper than the CC from Michelin and lasts as long...

    #2881
    1. 4cvg Thierry Priem archived

      The crucial point is not that it is cheaper & lasts longer than superior rivals but that it is not greatly inferior in performance. Personally, I am always willing to pay for superior performance on parameters I prioritise.

      #2882