Good day everyone. I have owned my prius since 2011. I absolutely love the car. The only gripe I have so far is how quickly the OEM tires have worn down. I have 35K miles on car, had the tires rotated every 5K miles, and drive on roads that are well kept (no pot holes, divits, missing chunks or anything like that). I called the dealership from where I purchased the vehicle, and they said that OEM tires do not come with a treadwear warranty. strange. What is your take on the Yoko's? So, with that being said, I am looking for a new set of tires. I am looking at the Michelin Energy Saver A/S, Michelin Defenders or Goodyear Assurance. I looked through F8L sticky on LRR tire thread (thanks btw), and it was very helpful. Which tire do you all recommend? Which tire have you noticed have a good treadwear life? Thanks for stopping by. Jay
We were told that the OEM tires would wear quickly and would not have a long life. So we knew to expect it. We have to use studded winter tires part of the year anyway. There has been a lot of debate here as to which brand name is 'better' for winter driving. As for summer tires I am not sure if any one brand is really any more cost-effective than another brand.
There is indeed a big difference between all-season/summer tires. We know that some tires are much more efficient than others. Some have very long tread life. Some cost a lot less than others. The trick is figuring out the fuel economy difference and then doing the math. Treadwear warranty / mpg = gallons of fuel used * gas price/gallon = money spent on fuel + price of tires / tread wear warranty = cost per mile Let's use the Michelin Energy Saver A/S and Goodyear Assurance Fuel Max as an example: Energy Saver A/S 65,000miles / 53.8mpg= 1208 * $3.6/ga = $4,349 + $432 / 65,000miles = $.0735/mile Goodyear Assurance Fuel Max 65,000miles / 51.6mpg= 1259 * $3.6/ga = $4,534 + $396 / 65,000miles = $.0758/mile Tire Test Results : When Round and Black Becomes Lean and Green As you can see, a more efficient tire can be more cost effective than a cheaper tire. Even the Defender with its 90,000 mile treadlife loses out to the Energy Saver A/S because it is less efficient. I would take the Defender over the Fuel Max, however. It's a better tires and has a better cost/mile rating.
No problem. You can see my other thread where I add in the cost of install of multiple sets of tires over the life of a car instead of the life of a tire. I need to go back and refine it though. Total lifetime cost for fuel and tires over 150,000 miles | PriusChat
That's strange. I received Tire Warranty information for my Yokohama S33's when I bought the car. It comes with tread and road hazard so I'm not sure if it's just something my dealer does special? It's up to 40K miles if I remember correctly.
How much tread depth remains? Are the wear bar indicators going (or nearly) solid right across? A cheap tread-depth gauge will help you check. Legally you're supposed to replace when the wear bars are solid across. And that's what treadwear warranties consider as "worn out". I believe that's around 2/32" remaining tread depth. But popular opinion is to replace a by the time you reach around 4/32", especially if there's any snow in your future. Anyway, I'd suggest either the Michelin Energy Saver A/S, or for a bit cheaper: the Bridgestone Ecopia EP20. Just checke and see both are available at Costco USA, so readily available anywhere I'd guess. We've had the EP20's on a previous vehicle, they were decent road feel, quite good for rolling resistance.
I've got about 31K on mine. Last time I looked -- my tires seem to have quite a bit of tread left. Geez, I've got a vernier caliper - I should be measuring them to see if I have 4/32" of tread left ... When my Yoko Avid s33 wear out - I will replace them with the best LLR tires I can get. Maybe something like Michelin Energy Saver A/S?
I replaced my Avid S33's when they hit 40k as I was preparing for a long road trip up north. If it wasn't for the trip, I'd be looking for replacements about now, with 44,500 miles. I wanted Michelin Energy Savers but at the time there were none to be found, so ended up with Ecopia EP422's. Not the best tire out there, but it's a great tire for the money. Out the door price at Costco was about $420, with the $100 rebate. I have about 4,500 miles on them now and I can tell they'll go at least 60k miles easily (65k warranty). So far my mpg's have not been impacted either way.
I love my Michelin Energy Savers A/S. Very smooth ride. Can't say whether it's really increased my mpg- run about 49 winter, maybe 52 summer.
I'm going to be scared to see what you will be able to do with a broken in set of Michelin's. Woo Hoo!
I got 51,000 miles on my Yokohama's before I switched to my Michelin Energy Saver A/S tires. There was no drop in fuel efficiency between my worn (2/32) Yokos and the brand new Michelin's. Actually, this last summer, I got 4 of my best 5 tanks using these new tires. I can't wait for next summer to see how well they do. They've been great. Less road noise and better road feel. There was some tram-lining early in their life on grooved pavement, but that has gone away. Great tires!
Thanks everyone for your feedback. I stilling at about 4/32 right now at 35.5K miles. I am thinking of sticking with Michelin, energy saver A/S or defenders. not sure. F8L, thanks for your price breakdown, very informative.
To my surprise, after making this post, I'm averaging 55mpg on these old yokos. Average temp in the AM is 34*, and 65* in the afternoon. Can't wait to swap them out with the Michelin ES/AS later this year. SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 ? 2