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2018 AMS All Season Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
6 min read Updated
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Dry
  3. Wet
  4. Snow
  5. Environment
  6. Results
  7. Continental AllSeasonContact
  8. Continental WinterContact TS 860
  9. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
  10. Michelin CrossClimate+
  11. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
  12. Vredestein Quatrac 5
  13. Nokian WeatherProof
  14. Continental Premium Contact 5
  15. Toyo Celsius

Test Summary
Wet Braking Continental Premium Contact 5
Dry Braking Continental WinterContact TS 860
Wet Handling Continental WinterContact TS 860
Wear Continental AllSeasonContact
Continental WinterContact TS 860
Rolling Resistance Continental AllSeasonContact
Continental WinterContact TS 860
Noise Continental Premium Contact 5
Snow Handling Vredestein Quatrac 5
Continental Premium Contact 5
Snow Handling Continental WinterContact TS 860
Nexen N Blue 4 Season
Ice Handling Continental WinterContact TS 860
Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
Michelin CrossClimate Plus
Continental Premium Contact 5
The 2018 Auto Motor Und Sport all season tyre test has tested seven all season tyres, and a summer and winter tyre through the usual range of dry, wet, snow and environmental tests.

The unique twist this year? For some reason, the summer and winter reference tyres are in the popular 205/55 R16 size, while the seven tested all season tyres are in 225/45 R17. Strange. In theory, the narrower tyres will have a harder time during the dry testing, but should have a small advantage during snow running.

In spite of the curious size choices, it's a really interesting test, and highlights the different qualities in the various all season tyre offerings. It's also fortunate that the final data and conclusions are very close to our own All Season Tyre Video, so be sure to check that out too.

Dry

It won't come as any surprise that in the dry, the summer tyre dominated the braking test, with the Michelin CrossClimate dividing the gap between the summer tyre, and the rest of the all season tyres. Interestingly, even the narrower winter tyre could hold its own amongst the wider all season tyres, once again proving the brilliance of the Continental WinterContact TS860.

Dry Braking

Spread: 9.40 M (26.3%)|Avg: 42.02 M
Dry braking in meters (Lower is better)
Dry Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

Dry handling mixed the order up a little with the Vredestein Quatrac 5 posting the fastest average speed across the 1900m circuit, beating the narrower summer tyre. The rest of the order was as you would expect.

Dry Handling

Spread: 4.30 Km/H (3.5%)|Avg: 119.19 Km/H
Dry Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
  1. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    121.60 Km/H
  2. Continental Premium Contact 5
    120.70 Km/H
  3. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    120.10 Km/H
  4. Continental AllSeasonContact
    119.80 Km/H
  5. Toyo Celsius
    119.10 Km/H
  6. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    118.10 Km/H
  7. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    118.00 Km/H
  8. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    118.00 Km/H
  9. Nokian WeatherProof
    117.30 Km/H

Wet

We're unsure why the Continental winter tyre had such an advantage during wet braking, but it led the pack of all season tyres by a huge margin. The summer tyre finished in fifth place overall, behind the Goodyear, Michelin and Nexen all season tyres. This isn't something we've seen in other all season tests, with the summer tyre normally matching the best all season tyres on test.

Wet Braking

Spread: 7.20 M (22.6%)|Avg: 36.30 M
Wet braking in meters (Lower is better)
Wet Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

Wet handling once again changed the order. The narrower summer and winter tyres seemed to struggle during the 1823m wet handling course, leaving the Michelin with a modest advantage over the second placed Goodyear and third placed Nexen.

Wet Handling

Spread: 4.50 Km/H (6%)|Avg: 72.53 Km/H
Wet Handling Average Speed (Higher is better)
  1. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    74.40 Km/H
  2. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    73.60 Km/H
  3. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    73.10 Km/H
  4. Continental AllSeasonContact
    73.00 Km/H
  5. Continental Premium Contact 5
    72.90 Km/H
  6. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    72.80 Km/H
  7. Nokian WeatherProof
    72.10 Km/H
  8. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    71.00 Km/H
  9. Toyo Celsius
    69.90 Km/H

The narrower tyres naturally had a big advantage during aquaplaning tests, where getting water out of the tread is the key criteria to scoring well.

Straight Aqua

Spread: 14.60 Km/H (18.4%)|Avg: 68.91 Km/H
Float Speed in Km/H (Higher is better)
  1. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    79.30 Km/H
  2. Continental Premium Contact 5
    74.60 Km/H
  3. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    68.20 Km/H
  4. Continental AllSeasonContact
    67.80 Km/H
  5. Nokian WeatherProof
    67.50 Km/H
  6. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    66.30 Km/H
  7. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    66.20 Km/H
  8. Toyo Celsius
    65.60 Km/H
  9. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    64.70 Km/H

Snow

The narrower Continental winter tyre just beat the impressive Continental all season tyre during the snow braking and snow handling testing.

Snow Braking

Spread: 24.30 M (85.6%)|Avg: 32.88 M
Snow braking in meters (Lower is better)
Snow Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

Snow Handling

Spread: 47.90 Km/H (85.7%)|Avg: 43.60 Km/H
Snow handling average speed (Higher is better)
  1. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    55.90 Km/H
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact
    48.20 Km/H
  3. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    48.10 Km/H
  4. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    47.10 Km/H
  5. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    47.00 Km/H
  6. Toyo Celsius
    46.80 Km/H
  7. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    46.50 Km/H
  8. Nokian WeatherProof
    44.80 Km/H
  9. Continental Premium Contact 5
    8.00 Km/H

Environment

The three Continental tyres on test all proved to have an excellent low rolling resistance.

Rolling Resistance

Spread: 1.70 kg / t (21.5%)|Avg: 8.54 kg / t
Rolling resistance in kg t (Lower is better)
  1. Continental Premium Contact 5
    7.90 kg / t
  2. Continental AllSeasonContact
    7.90 kg / t
  3. Nokian WeatherProof
    8.10 kg / t
  4. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    8.20 kg / t
  5. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    8.40 kg / t
  6. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    8.60 kg / t
  7. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    9.10 kg / t
  8. Toyo Celsius
    9.10 kg / t
  9. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    9.60 kg / t

19,000 km
£1.45/L
--
Annual Difference
--
Lifetime Savings
--
Extra Fuel/Energy
--
Extra CO2

Estimates based on typical driving conditions. Rolling resistance accounts for approximately 20% of IC vehicle fuel consumption and 25% of EV energy consumption. Actual savings vary based on driving style, vehicle weight, road conditions, and tyre age. For comparative purposes only. Lifetime savings based on a 40,000km / 25,000 mile tread life.

Interestingly the narrower Continental summer tyre was almost the noisiest tyre on test, once again proving that all season and winter tyres are often quieter than their summer counterparts.

Noise

Spread: 3.60 dB (5%)|Avg: 73.68 dB
External noise in dB (Lower is better)
  1. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    71.90 dB
  2. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    72.00 dB
  3. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    73.10 dB
  4. Continental AllSeasonContact
    73.80 dB
  5. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    73.90 dB
  6. Toyo Celsius
    74.10 dB
  7. Nokian WeatherProof
    74.30 dB
  8. Continental Premium Contact 5
    74.50 dB
  9. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    75.50 dB

The Nexen was significantly cheaper than the rest of the all season tyres, and even cheaper than the smaller summer and winter tyres. The new Nexen all season tyre is proving to be incredible value.

Price

Spread: 39.00 (42.4%)|Avg: 113.89
Price in local currency (Lower is better)
  1. Nexen N Blue 4 Season
    92.00
  2. Continental Premium Contact 5
    93.00
  3. Toyo Celsius
    106.00
  4. Continental WinterContact TS 860
    110.00
  5. Nokian WeatherProof
    117.00
  6. Vredestein Quatrac 5
    123.00
  7. Continental AllSeasonContact
    126.00
  8. Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
    127.00
  9. Michelin CrossClimate Plus
    131.00

Results

Magazine score weighting - 20% dry, 40% wet, 20% snow, 20% environment

Continental AllSeasonContact
Total: 74.5
Dry 7.6
Wet 9.2
Snow 9.7
Subjective 7
Wet Subjective 8
Comfort 6
Rolling Resistance 10
Noise 8
Overall 9
Continental WinterContact TS 860
Total: 79.9
Dry 7.2
Wet 10.1
Snow 10.6
Subjective 7
Wet Subjective 9
Comfort 7
Rolling Resistance 10
Noise 10
Overall 9
Goodyear Vector 4 Seasons Gen 2
Total: 74.5
Dry 7.2
Wet 9.9
Snow 8.6
Subjective 8
Wet Subjective 9
Comfort 7
Rolling Resistance 7
Noise 9
Overall 8.8
3rd

Michelin CrossClimate+

225/45 R16
Michelin CrossClimate Plus
Total: 69.6
Dry 8.6
Wet 8.7
Snow 7.2
Subjective 8
Wet Subjective 9
Comfort 7
Rolling Resistance 6
Noise 7
Overall 8.1
4th

Nexen N Blue 4 Season

225/45 R16
Nexen N Blue 4 Season
Total: 69.3
Dry 7.6
Wet 8.2
Snow 8.6
Subjective 8
Wet Subjective 7
Comfort 8
Rolling Resistance 4
Noise 10
Overall 7.9
5th

Vredestein Quatrac 5

225/45 R16
Vredestein Quatrac 5
Total: 66.8
Dry 8.7
Wet 8.1
Snow 7.2
Subjective 9
Wet Subjective 6
Comfort 7
Rolling Resistance 5
Noise 8
Overall 7.8
6th

Nokian WeatherProof

225/45 R16
Nokian WeatherProof
Total: 67.2
Dry 7.2
Wet 7.6
Snow 7.8
Subjective 7
Wet Subjective 7
Comfort 6
Rolling Resistance 9
Noise 8
Overall 7.6
Continental Premium Contact 5
Total: 72.2
Dry 9.9
Wet 9.1
Snow 1.2
Subjective 9
Wet Subjective 9
Comfort 10
Rolling Resistance 8
Noise 8
Overall 8
7th

Toyo Celsius

225/45 R16
Toyo Celsius
Total: 61.7
Dry 7.2
Wet 6.1
Snow 7.8
Subjective 8
Wet Subjective 6
Comfort 7
Rolling Resistance 5
Noise 8
Overall 6.6

Discussion

19 comments
  1. grapevine archived

    According to BMW "Star" marked tyres are essential on the All4 Mini as ordinary tyres can cause the electronicaly controlled 4 wheel drive gear train to tie itself in knots, but local BMW dealers did not know of any Star marked all seasons tyres.

    Still looking for tips on best Tyres 235X40X18 for Audi S4V8 Quatro living near Inverness; less concerned about mpg or noise most concerned about handling / steering sensitivity and wet / icy conditions.

    #4961
    1. TyreReviews grapevine archived

      Manufacturers love that line, but I'm sure you'll be able to find a lot of people running non * marked tyres with no issue.

      #4963
      1. grapevine TyreReviews archived

        Can you please direct me to some All4 Mini owners who have had "No Issues" with non Star marked tyres ?

        A tyre dealer assured me that they had had "No trouble" with ordinary tyres on a Mini, but when pressed conceded that it was not a 4 wheel drive Mini.

        Why would a BMW dealer not expecting me to buy tires from them be so adamant that non Star marked tires could accelerate wear on my All4 Mini transmission ?

        #4965
        1. TyreReviews grapevine archived

          I have no such sources, I don't own a BMW mini. I'd suggest getting over to an owners forum and seeing what people are doing in the real world. Dealers advice is often as cautious and on brand message as possible.

          #4966
  2. grapevine archived

    Need all season tyres for two very different cars, Inverness weather. All 4 Mini and Audi S4 ( Quatro 350 BHP V8). Very brassed of with Michelin, tyres perishing after 7 years, Michelin said get stuffed, over 6 years old.

    So need a BMW Allwheel drive star marked tyre for the Mini All4 (MUST be star marked )

    and very positive handling all season for the S4 Vredesteiin or Continental ?

    Any suggestions gratefully recd

    #4957
    1. TyreReviews grapevine archived

      Sadly I'm not in a position to know what's * marked and what isn't in your various sizes. The 7 year rule is fair though, no one recommends using tyres after 5 years of use.

      #4958
  3. Paul archived

    It is mentioned in the results summary that the Michelin CrossClimates got a "poor curved aquaplaning result" but there is no curved aquaplaning graph?

    #4238
    1. TyreReviews Paul archived

      We don't cover every element tested, you can check out the Auto Motor Und Sport website for the curved aqua testing :)

      #4239
  4. John Rayner archived

    Hi Tyre Reviews, I've just bought a mid engined 2006 MR2 Roadster, and I want to get some all season tyres to use over the winter months to avoid any hairy moments if it gets frosty. I was all set to get Continental All Season Contact (theoretically the best available in my staggered sizes - 215/45 16 and 185/55 15). Then I saw the above test, and saw that the Vredestein Quatrac 5 gets a score of 9 for subjective (the same as the reference summer tyre), and is said to have the best steering response. As I am keen to retain as sporty a feel as possible in normal conditons, I'm now leaning towards the Vred instead. Is my logic sound, or am I being overly led by the results of a single test? Thanks

    #4005
    1. TyreReviews John Rayner archived

      Your logic is both good in both directions. The Conti is a great tyre, but the Vred is very good for the size and the Vred has been noted to have great steering in a number of tests now. The other option is CrossClimate but i presume not available in your awkward sizes?

      #4006
      1. John Rayner TyreReviews archived

        Thanks. Yeah, Crossclimate unavailable. I've emailed Michelin and they've no intention at present of making them in my rear size. Think I'll try the Vred

        #4007
        1. TyreReviews John Rayner archived

          Whatever you go for, let me know how you find them :)

          #4008
          1. John Rayner TyreReviews archived

            Hello Again, got my Vredestein Quatrac 5 fitted today, and took car out on some choice roads. Really, really pleased. Instantly make the car really secure, even in this unseasonably mild weather we're having here in the south at the mo. Roads just starting to get the first fall of leaves which, mixed with rain, create that greasy road feeling and the car just felt planted, even over bumpy, twisty negative camber back lanes. My first ever tyre with snowflake mountain symbol, so I've got nothing to compare them to. But the tyres I bought the car with, three weeks ago, were Tigar Prima front - drastically lacking feel, and Bridgestone Potenza RE040 rear - apparently good in it's day, but honestly a bit skittish. Compared to those, my new Vreds have more feel at the front, about the same feel at the back, and more grip across the board. So, it looks like I've got what I wanted. Difficult for me to imagine a siped tyre feeling more sporty. Can't wait to try them in cold weather ...

            #4065
    2. BahnStormer John Rayner archived

      John - I've got the same car and I've gone for the TS860's, so we can compare notes on MR2ROC in March ;)
      Thanks for the reviews (to the other John!)...

      #4053
      1. John Rayner BahnStormer archived

        Nice one. Just got my Vred Quatracs fitted today and lovin em! Feel really secure

        #4064
  5. kelper archived

    There's no graph for the snow performance?

    #3962
    1. TyreReviews kelper archived

      VERY good point! I've updated the article to include the graphs!

      #3967