i just put the ep422 bridgestone on my 2010 and i have never had a tire that i hate so much. these tires pull and hunt all over the road,,, anyone had this experience? noticed it as soon as i drove on the road ,,, after removing the ep20's
Brand new tires will sometimes do that because of deep tread and not being fully cured. After a couple thousand miles they start acting normal. Unless you have a defective tire.
The sidewalls are fairly soft on the EP422, see alfon's recent post about the wandering on the highway. The Energy Saver A/S does the same, and it worsens as the tread wears down. From what I can tell, the only tires that the seem to deliver strong fuel economy while maintaining "safe" straightline stability are the OE tires. Anything else either compromises fuel economy or traction/handling.
The Michelin Energy Saver tire is a superior tire to the Ecopia EP422. The Ecopia's seem to drift especially at 65-70 + mph speed. The sidewalls are much softer it seems than the Energy tires. I plan on returning them back to Costco, 30 day money back guarantee, and getting 4 new Energy Saver tires. My Energy tires had 68,000 miles when I purchased the Ecopia tires. Even with that many miles they seem to handle and ride better than the Ecopia tires. The Michelin Energy gets 2-3 mpg more than the Ecopoias as well from my findings.
I replaced my oem's with Continental ProContact EcoPlus and have been very pleased so far (6k miles). I did notice for the first 2-3k miles that my mileage dropped by 2-3 mpg and there was a 'squirmy' feel to the tires, although they felt very secure in turns and on wet roads; they are also quiet. Now that I have more miles on them the squirmy feel is gone and my mileage is about where it was with the original eom's, i.e., around 52 mpg all-around. I don't know about your Ecopia tires, but perhaps they will settle in after a few thousand miles like my Continentals did.
Yes, new tires need to brake in some, but it should take a couple of hundred miles at most. If sidewalls are too soft, more pressure should fix it. OP: what pressure do you use?
It is unacceptable for these tires to not perform at their full potential at the Toyota recommended pressures. Period. iPhone ?
I don't think so. I stopped using "Toyota recommended pressures" in my cars many years ago as I was fed up with mushy tire response and poor cornering. Higher pressure fixed all those problems.