Not a lot to talk about here, which is the real story.
Wednesday I had 4 of the Goodyear Weather Ready tires mounted on my Toyboggan. Thursday is snowed, and sleeted, and snowed some more, and rained a bit, and then just snowed a little while.
Today, Friday, I brushed off the car while Herself finished a few shovels full on the driveway. It was by no means clear, still being covered with ice and snow.
The driveway is gentle up-slope to reach the road, where a minor hillock of snow and ice from the frequent plowing had to be breached. Last week that would have meant slipping tires and much histrionics.
We loaded the people in the car, buckled up, put the Toyboggan in drive, and pulled out of the driveway.
That's it... just pulled out. Like it was a sunny day in the old homeland, and not even a hint of complaint.
The rest of drive, all 3 hours of it, was on various road types. Snow, ice, slush, and mostly just wet. No dry pavement at all to be found. Also no hu-hu. We just drove all normal like. Boringly normal. Just the way it should be with a car full of womens and chilluns.
Yup, damn good tires by every measure so far. Too expensive, while also being worth every penny. I have zero regrets buying these.
2 comments:
I have a set on my Acadia.
They work great but yeah they are a little pricy.
Nothing but Michelins go on my vehicles. LTX M&S for my wife, and LTX AT2 off-road tires in the light truck version on my Tundra. I am coming up on 80,000 miles on the set on the Tundra and they're still legal, but gonna replace soon. They don't hum too bad and have never let me down. They fit on factory rims and properly in the wheel well. Run about $300 apiece.
I thought Goodyear was a "get woke, go broke" company for cracking down on employees for wearing anything MAGA, Trump bumper stickers in the parking lots, and Blue Lives Matter?
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