You can install our site as a web app on your iOS device by utilizing the Add to Home Screen feature in Safari. Please see this thread for more details on this.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
But how does it handle on the wrong type of leaves?Just returned from a two week trip in the Alps with the Michelin CC2, besides the poor rim protection, they were absolutely brilliant in fresh & packed snow! Combined with the Off-Road mode on the MYLR, it really felt sure & steady, no hill that we couldn't climb.
Impatiently waiting for the 0.0001mm of snow in London next week now...
Sadly it never matters in the South-East. One turbodiesel rwd German marque will come to a halt on a slight incline. Then another identical machine will attempt to go around them, bouncing off the rev limiter, and block the other lane. Other than the occasional Yaris or Panda passing via the pavement, the road will remain blocked until the Spring.Impatiently waiting for the 0.0001mm of snow in London next week now...
Stay with the car, have your hockey pucks in hand, and be ready to cancel your appointment if they show any cruelty to your carAnd would you trust Halfords to work on a tesla?
I’ve got the Goodyear 4Seasons SUV ones coming for a mobile install on Monday. They are 255/45/19/104W. C efficiency, B wet, so not my first choice but at least are correct speed rating.Like many people in this thread, I have struggled to find all season tyres for the MYLR.
I eventually found some online at ATS, the Goodyear all season.
But the issue I have is that they have a wet grip rating of "C" (and speed rating of "H"). So I don't know if I should try get those, or just get summer tyres with a wet grip rating of "A" instead.
I am debating which of the following to get:
Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 3 (255/45 R19 104Y XL)
Efficency: B, Wet grip: A
£206 fully fitted (at ATS)
or
Goodyear Eagle Sport All Season (255/45 R19 104H XL)
Efficency: B, Wet grip: C
£252 fully fitted (at ATS)
And I see Halfords also has the eagle F1s for about the same price, which brings up another point:
Halfords has £8 per tyre extended warranty.
Yet ATS is £25 per tyre.
Is it worth getting the extended warranty? Why is ATS so much more?
And would you trust Halfords to work on a tesla?
After all this I get a call from Halfords this morning that the tyres (that I have already paid for) didn’t show up and they now can’t source them. Not going to be using them againI’ve got the Goodyear 4Seasons SUV ones coming for a mobile install on Monday. They are 255/45/19/104W. C efficiency, B wet, so not my first choice but at least are correct speed rating.
I documented this earlier in the thread, but I had the exact same when I ordered and paid for 4x Continental AllSeasonContact from Tyre Shopper, who are part of the same group as Halfords & National, despite being shown as available. Their opinion was that they MUST supply the tyres immediately, but I told them that I wasn't in a rush and if they could source them then to keep the order open and let me know. In the meantime I would see if I could find some elsewhere, (which I eventually did from Blackcircles on a black friday discount which matched the Tyre Shopper price).After all this I get a call from Halfords this morning that the tyres (that I have already paid for) didn’t show up and they now can’t source them. Not going to be using them again
Yes, mine was a mobile appointment (as I say, same company as Halfords) as well and I too chose a date and paid in full upfront. Clearly their stock management or stock availability listings with distributors system isn't very good.This was for a Halfords mobile appointment, so paid for the tyres and mobile install date a week in advance of the install date (which was only a day or so after their first available date). So - I think I would have a reasonable expectation they would actually have ordered the tyres at the time.
So - now have a date for installing Pirelli’s via Asda Tyres. Will see if those actually show up and get installed
Whilst insurance companies add all sorts of onerous clauses in their policies, surely this must be correct. On our M3 I did check with our insurer when getting a set of winters, but solely because it involved a different set of rims as well. That made me feel checking was prudent. Tyres alone if the correct spec and factory size I wouldn't even think to check.Where do you get the idea that all Tesla tyres are stretched?
And that online tyre supplier is talking rubbish.
You don't need to tell your insurance company if you fit different tyres to those which came on the car originally as long as they are the correct size, load and speed rating.
But of course, if you ring up your insurance company and tell them about anything you're going to do to your car it gives them the chance to note it down as a modification and possibly charge you money.
Agree that you get a different opinions depending on who your talking to, i have had tyre shops tell me they won't fit non TO tyres to Teslas and others that are not bothered.I have plenty of anecdotes regarding insurance companies and how they like to make things up just so they can put a note on your policy and charge an 'admin fee'. Even just speaking to more than one agent in the same insurer will often give you a completely different response.
A lot of the time you could be speaking to a representative of a broker (not necessarily the underwriter themselves), who may or may not know anything about your particular vehicle or the bits fitted to it but is happy to find ways to bump up your premium or charge you additional fees.
On the whole, they don't understand suspension components, tyres, brakes, wheels and all the other parts you might want to upgrade to make your car safer and better. They simply put them all in the 'modifications' bin along with body kits, loud exhausts and furry dice.
Anything they don't understand could be an additonal risk and as they are risk-averse it's down to us to explain it to them in a way they'll understand, why a particular change in specification doesn't increase their risk.
Tyres are a non-issue as long as you keep to the manufacturers specifications. Same as if you get a suspension arm or brake disc replaced with a non-Tesla one. As long as they're the correct spec., E marked, legal and the car as a whole is in a 'roadworthy condition' your insurer won't make anything of it.
So much fuss is made of insurance and warranty liabilty these days. I get it, but it's not as bad as most people seem to think and there's a lot of misinformation out there.
You'd hope tyre dealers would know everything about tyres, wouldn't you?
They certainly seem to know everything about upselling tyres that's for sure.You'd hope tyre dealers would know everything about tyres, wouldn't you?