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2018 Test World Summer Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
8 min read Updated
Below are all the data points for the 2018 Test World Summer 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.

Pirelli CINTURATO P7
Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
Gislaved Ultra Speed
Yokohama Advan Sport V105
Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
Michelin Pilot Sport 4
Triangle Sportex TSH11
Cooper Zeon CS8
Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
Falken Azenis FK510
Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
Continental Premium Contact 6
Kumho Ecsta PS71
Bridgestone Turanza T005
Nokian Hakka Black 2

Quick Navigation

Dry Performance Overview

Dry Braking (M)

Spread: 3.20 M (10.1%) | Avg: 33.02 M

Dry braking in meters (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Hankook Ventus S1 evo2 with a result of 31.8 M. The difference between best and worst was 9.1%.
  1. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    31.8 M
  2. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    31.8 M
  3. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    31.8 M
  4. Continental Premium Contact 6
    32 M
  5. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    32.1 M
  6. Falken Azenis FK510
    32.2 M
  7. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    32.6 M
  8. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    32.7 M
  9. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    32.9 M
  10. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    32.9 M
  11. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    32.9 M
  12. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    33.4 M
  13. Cooper Zeon CS8
    34.2 M
  14. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    35 M
  15. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    35 M
  16. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    35 M

Subj. Dry Handling ( Points)

Spread: 7.00 Points (70%) | Avg: 6.69 Points

Subjective Dry Handling Score (Higher is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Continental Premium Contact 6 with a result of 10 Points. The difference between best and worst was 70%.
  1. Continental Premium Contact 6
    10 Points
  2. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    9 Points
  3. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    9 Points
  4. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    8 Points
  5. Falken Azenis FK510
    8 Points
  6. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    7 Points
  7. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    7 Points
  8. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    6 Points
  9. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    6 Points
  10. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    6 Points
  11. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    6 Points
  12. Cooper Zeon CS8
    6 Points
  13. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    6 Points
  14. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    6 Points
  15. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    4 Points
  16. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    3 Points

Wet Performance Overview

Wet Braking (M)

Spread: 2.30 M (8.6%) | Avg: 27.97 M

Wet braking in meters (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Michelin Pilot Sport 4 with a result of 26.8 M. The difference between best and worst was 7.9%.
  1. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    26.8 M
  2. Falken Azenis FK510
    26.8 M
  3. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    27.3 M
  4. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    27.5 M
  5. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    27.8 M
  6. Cooper Zeon CS8
    27.8 M
  7. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    27.9 M
  8. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    28 M
  9. Continental Premium Contact 6
    28 M
  10. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    28.1 M
  11. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    28.2 M
  12. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    28.2 M
  13. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    28.5 M
  14. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    28.5 M
  15. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    29 M
  16. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    29.1 M

Wet Handling (s)

Spread: 1.70 s (6.2%) | Avg: 27.83 s

Wet handling time in seconds (Lower is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Vredestein Ultrac Vorti with a result of 27.3 s. The difference between best and worst was 5.9%.
  1. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    27.3 s
  2. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    27.3 s
  3. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    27.4 s
  4. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    27.5 s
  5. Continental Premium Contact 6
    27.5 s
  6. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    27.6 s
  7. Falken Azenis FK510
    27.7 s
  8. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    27.8 s
  9. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    27.8 s
  10. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    27.9 s
  11. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    28 s
  12. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    28 s
  13. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    28 s
  14. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    28.1 s
  15. Cooper Zeon CS8
    28.4 s
  16. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    29 s

Subj. Wet Handling ( Points)

Spread: 7.00 Points (70%) | Avg: 7.56 Points

Subjective Wet Handling Score (Higher is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Michelin Pilot Sport 4 with a result of 10 Points. The difference between best and worst was 70%.
  1. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    10 Points
  2. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    10 Points
  3. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    10 Points
  4. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    9 Points
  5. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    9 Points
  6. Continental Premium Contact 6
    9 Points
  7. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    8 Points
  8. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    8 Points
  9. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    8 Points
  10. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    8 Points
  11. Falken Azenis FK510
    8 Points
  12. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    6 Points
  13. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    6 Points
  14. Cooper Zeon CS8
    5 Points
  15. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    4 Points
  16. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    3 Points

Straight Aqua (Km/H)

Spread: 7.50 Km/H (8.5%) | Avg: 84.74 Km/H

Float Speed in Km/H (Higher is better)

Key Insight: The best performer was Michelin Pilot Sport 4 with a result of 88.5 Km/H. The difference between best and worst was 8.5%.
  1. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    88.5 Km/H
  2. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    87.2 Km/H
  3. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    86.5 Km/H
  4. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    86.4 Km/H
  5. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    86.2 Km/H
  6. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    86.2 Km/H
  7. Falken Azenis FK510
    85.1 Km/H
  8. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    84.5 Km/H
  9. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    84.2 Km/H
  10. Cooper Zeon CS8
    84.2 Km/H
  11. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    84 Km/H
  12. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    83.8 Km/H
  13. Continental Premium Contact 6
    83.5 Km/H
  14. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    83 Km/H
  15. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    81.6 Km/H
  16. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    81 Km/H

Comfort Performance Overview

Noise (dB)

Spread: 1.60 dB (2.6%) | Avg: 62.39 dB

External noise in dB (Lower is better)

Key Insight: All the tyres in the noise test finished less than 3% apart.
  1. Cooper Zeon CS8
    61.8 dB
  2. Gislaved Ultra Speed
    61.9 dB
  3. Falken Azenis FK510
    61.9 dB
  4. Pirelli CINTURATO P7
    62.2 dB
  5. Vredestein Ultrac Vorti
    62.2 dB
  6. Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3
    62.2 dB
  7. Kumho Ecsta PS71
    62.2 dB
  8. Bridgestone Turanza T005
    62.2 dB
  9. Nokian Hakka Black 2
    62.2 dB
  10. Hankook Ventus S1 evo2
    62.4 dB
  11. Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2
    62.4 dB
  12. Continental Premium Contact 6
    62.5 dB
  13. Michelin Pilot Sport 4
    62.8 dB
  14. Triangle Sportex TSH11
    62.8 dB
  15. Yokohama Advan Sport V105
    63.2 dB
  16. Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus
    63.4 dB

Overall Findings

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

Position Tyre Score
Michelin Pilot Sport 4 0%
2 Nokian Hakka Black 2 0%
3 Falken Azenis FK510 0%
4 Continental Premium Contact 6 0%
5 Bridgestone Turanza T005 0%
6 Vredestein Ultrac Vorti 0%
7 Hankook Ventus S1 evo2 0%
8 Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3 0%
9 Dunlop SportMaxx RT 2 0%
10 Kumho Ecsta PS71 0%
11 Pirelli CINTURATO P7 0%
12 Cooper Zeon CS8 0%
13 Yokohama Advan Sport V105 0%
14 Nankang Sportnex AS2 Plus 0%
15 Triangle Sportex TSH11 0%
16 Gislaved Ultra Speed 0%

Discussion

16 comments
  1. NepgearGo archived

    Uh… I have tried both the Advan Sport V105 and Cinturato P7 on my 2019 STi, and this report is not accurate regarding the Advan.

    The Advan is a much more confident tire than the P7, especially in the wet. I get ESC lights frequently when trying to corner in rain at speeds like 50-70kph with the P7 on, almost crossing the lane and crashing into oncoming traffic once when doing a hairpin on a local hill in light rain because somehow the car's rear bolted free. (It shouldn't!) Fortunately I was quick enough to countersteer, but the guy in the car on the other lane must have been scared shitless. The Advan has much more grip, but they are rated the same for wet performance? And even below the P7 for dry performance? Seriously? Makes me think if they've mistaken the P Zero for the P7…

    #5145
  2. Cumbrian Foz archived

    I fully agree with the inclusion of subjective data - as "feel" and confidence play a big part in making driving relaxed and enjoyable.

    On another subject, I do think it would be helpful to list when and where these various tests were performed: the temperature sensistivity of tyres seems to vary quite a bit, and there can be a world of difference between Ladoux in July and the A7 on an October morning!

    #3503
    1. TyreReviews Cumbrian Foz archived

      I agree, test temperatures would be a huge plus, but very few magazines include it, even in all season and winter tests where temperature is a key factor.

      #3506
      1. Cumbrian Foz TyreReviews archived

        Maybe TyreReviews should organise a UK tyre test done under typical British conditions i.e. damp and not too warm!

        BTW, thanks for the site, very useful :-)

        #3522
        1. TyreReviews Cumbrian Foz archived

          The problem with testing is you need it to be dry so you can do the dry testing, then you can wet the track to do wet testing. That means most of the tracks we use are in south Europe and super warm :/

          #3523
          1. Cumbrian Foz TyreReviews archived

            I can see the problem, but given a bit of time and effort I wouldn't have thought the difficulties are insurmountable. If you study weather a bit, there are places that are cool & reasonably dry in spring, Madrid and central/eastern Poland spring to mind, though if you were to venture further afield there would be better places around the globe I'm sure. Even Norfolk (Snetterton?) might fit the bill given a normal winter. However I guess the issue as per always would be making it financially worthwhile.....

            #3548
            1. TyreReviews Cumbrian Foz archived

              Renting somewhere like snetterton for the day is upwards of £10,000, and you risk wasting that money if it's wet (which lets face it in the UK is anyone's guess.)

              Most tyre tests happen on tyre manufacturers test tracks for free, and their test facilities are usually in the best places for the longest possible year round testing!

              #3549
  3. Melchiz adek archived

    There is what seems to be an increasing weight/bias being put on this 'subjective' feel concept which by definition cannot be measured and has appeared in tyre tests since the launch of the Michelin PS4 and Conti Premium Contact 6. What it does is allow magazines to award top marks to a tyre that really didn't get 'top marks' by data. EVO's 2017 tyre test (and others) is an example of this , the PZ4 wins 3 out the 4 criteria yet loses the test to the PS4??? Crikey... undoing the whole point of the data and hard data is why tyre tests were invented. I've got to the point of ignoring the test winner and looking only at the measured data.

    #3480
    1. TyreReviews Melchiz adek archived

      Many tests still only look at objective data, but I think it's a good thing others are looking at subjective handling. I've experienced tyres which can be very fast over a wet handling lap, but you have to be absolutely on it to extract that speed, which isn't always safe or fun on the road.

      EVO does place a high importance on subjective, but its sister publication Auto Express places almost none so there's balance.

      With the gap between the best tyres on test almost nothing, I feel like it's important to consider both criteria.

      #3483
      1. Melchiz adek TyreReviews archived

        Trouble with that though is it allows greater scope for 'opinion' over fact...1 tester may prefer tyre A another tester tyre B. So when subjective 'feel' adds to or detracts from a tyre's score (as opposed to being a 'test note' which they used to be and welcomed) then overall scoring a hence final result can be manipulated in any direction and historically some have been caught out before (Nokian) and others even admitting to test specific tyres (Continental).
        Aside from this its interesting that according to TUV SUD tyre test (report# 713112819) that the Turanza T005 was 8% better in wet braking than the Cinturato P7 which is at odds with the above result albeit in a different size (205/55 R16).
        Ultimately tyre sales are king and favourable/unfavourable reviews transfer millions of currency.

        #3622
  4. Gary archived

    A couple of unusual tyre selections included in this test (Bridgestone's Turanza T005 and the Pirelli Cinturato P7.) Both of which I thought belonged in the premium touring tyre segment rather than the UHP one?
    Either way it demonstrates just what a good job Bridgestone has made of the T005. Whilst the P7 looks to be showing it's age.

    #3478
    1. TyreReviews Gary archived

      It also shows how little confidence Bridgestone have in their S001 product!

      #3479
    2. Melchiz adek Gary archived

      very true Gary....the PS4 should be put up against the P Zero PZ4 and not the Cinturato P7 apples and oranges

      #3481
      1. TyreReviews Melchiz adek archived

        I believe there's an internal update for the PZ4 P Zero coming so Pirelli aren't submitting the current tyre to tests.

        #3482
        1. Melchiz adek TyreReviews archived

          Strange you saying that..... as they are supposed to be bought on the open market for any objective tyre test and they're availabel on the open market.

          #3623
          1. TyreReviews Melchiz adek archived

            The tyre manufacturers still tell the magazines what version (or DOT) of the tyre they want them to buy on the open market. The tyre magazines recovers the cost of tyres from the manufacturer so if the manufacturer doesn't want to be part of it, they generally can't afford to buy the tyres without the rebate.

            #3625