Hey guys, I have a 2010 Prius I bought second hand that still had OEM tires... It's finally time (it's a low mileage car) to get the tires replaced and It seems the whole LRR thing has morphed quite a bit over the last few years... So I've narrowed down the choices to: Michelin Defender General Altimax RT43 From what I can tell, the defenders are quite a good all around tire with a slight drop in MPG compared to older LRR tires. But they replaced the energy savers so they should be LRR? The generals are a "hidden gem" with good MPG and super low cost. Since general tires is the "budget" wing of the continental line, they don't advertise to be LRR, but in real world testing, seem to perform as good as a LRR tire but at a deep discount. The cost difference between the two is about ~$85 (CAD) after all the rebates this year. Question to those with experience with aftermarket tires: 1) Are there any MPG differences between these two tires and the OEM tires? I mean with a ~5% (2-3 mpg) drop in MPG compared to OEMs from what I've seen on these threads means about $24 CAD/year in gas costs (averaged over the last two years worth of gas cost and mileage tracking). We dont' drive a lot but $24 over let's say another 7-8 years is nothing to sneeze at. Should I stick with OEM or some super LRR tire I haven't really considered? FYI, I get ~5.5L/100km during summer and run Michelin X-Ice3's during winter that get about 6.5L/100km. Not really sure what that translates to in terms of MPG. Thanks everyone!
What tire was the "OEM"? There isn't one specific tire all Prius come with. I'm confused. Are you meaning that the OEM tires were energy saver, and now you're replacing them so replacement should also be LRR? Or? FWIW, I just put Michelin Defender XT (the XT being Costco's version of Defender, by all reports more-or-less equivalent), on our son's Civic Hybrid. It's been getting abysmal mpg, but I'd put that down to their agressive driving as much as anything. When I got behind the wheel of the car (dropping them off at YVR airport), the mpg displayed was around 8.5, with half a tank gone. By the time I got the car back to north Coquitlam (about 30 km) I'd got it down to around 8.0. I tanked up, reset the trip meter, and changed out the Michelin XIce that were on (LRR snow tires, not bad really), went to OEM rims with Michelin Defender XT that had been purchased last fall, sat in my garage through the winter. Over the next week or two I drove the car a couple of times for shopping runs, just to keep it loosened up. And finally back out to YVR to pick them up. By the time I got out there I had the mpg indicator around 5.5. The tires felt very smooth and reasonably quiet. There was nothing really noticeable about them, which is a good thing I think. I don't think you can go wrong with the Defenders. I'm sure they give up a little mpg comparing to the Energy Savers, but they're in the running. They do have the Green-X label, fwiw.
No no.. the OEM tire is the original tire from Toyota.. The car's in the shop right now but for the life of me, I can't remember the brand of the stock tires. I think they're the bridgestone Ecopia EP100's? I mentioned they replaced the energy savers because from what I can tell, Michelin doesn't sell the Energy Savers anymore and the defender is the new SKU for LRR tires. Maybe I'm wrong. Kinda disheartening to see a ICE Civic doing about the same MPG as my 2010 Prius.. lol... Granted my Prius is subjected to daily <1km commutes. On those long trips, it does go down to 3.2-3.8.
I am thinking of buying the RT43 too, so I looked into reviews. Tirerack has a comparison video with some MPG comparisons across brands with the RT43. Look at the table at the bottom of this page: Tire Test Results : The Sporty Side of Comfort: Testing the Newest Grand Touring All-Season Tires The RT43 is not a LRR tire, so you will expect some MPG loss.
I was looking at all the tirerack reviews... I don't think the RT43's will be as bad (MPG wise) as you think... They use the same car across the reviews so the numbers can be compared to each other: Michelin Defender w/Green-X (LRR rated): 32.3 General Tire RT43 (T-rated): 32.3 Continental Purecontact w/ecoplus (LRR rated): 31.4 Continental's best LRR actually performs worse than the RT43 and Defender. and from what I've read, General Tire is the budget line of continental's brands. So I think there's some pressure from continental to not advertise the RT43 as LRR because they'll undercut their own premium LRR Purecontact tires by a relatively large margin.
Btw, that is for the H/V rated RT43.. there's a T-rated review here where the RT43 gets 32.3 MPG.. not a huge difference but a slight increase. : Tire Test Results : The Give and Take of All-Season Tires
Research on TireRack and Michelin website, and you'll see Energy Saver A/S and Defender are two distinct tires, and they both still in production. Also FYI, there's a new itteration of the Defender just coming out, with suffix T+H. Tread looks identical, and Michelin alludes to improved tread life. The Defender has always been touted by Michelin as excellent for tread life, but then you see mixed reviews by owners, commenting on disappointing tread life. Maybe Michelin is waking up to this, in damage control? Strange mixed-messages out of Michelin website though: The treadlife warranty for the Defender T+H is less than Defender. And: Defender indicates "eco-friendly", while the T+H version says nothing. Also, hard to tell from pictures, and explanation is sparse, but I'm not seeing Green-X label on the T+H version.
Folks, the tire rack "MPG test" is far from scientific. they drive on public roads at different times and seasons. furthermore, the is no info on standard deviation and no clue if those small differences are significant. the only reliable LRR test is in a tire lab, and it's not easy to standardize either. I actually bought the RT43 (H-rated) as low cost tires ($300) for my son's crappy car. they are quiet, but feel mushy. i have no illusions they are LRR (neither is his car, LOL).
Well, between having no data point and having the tirerack data point, i'm kinda taking tirerack numbers with a grain of salt. It's at least a place to start... I think i"m going to just go with the defenders. it's mileage advantage is just too good to ignore. It'll cost less over the lifespan of the tires even with the additional gas cost.
Just an update... I went with the defenders... The tireshop ended up putting on Defender H+T's... Not sure if this is worse or better. After ~a month of driving, we're averaging ~5.1L/100km. Up from ~4.8L/100km on my worn Bridgestone EP20's... We drive probably 90% city and short distances. So I expect that mileage to drop when I go on highways and further than 10km. The car is noticably sluggish when on battery power. I could "feel" the acceleration when on all electric mode with the EP20's but now I don't feel anything anymore. The tires are also a lot mushier and "comfortable". All in all, if these tires do last as long as they claim, I'll save a chunk of change. in the long run. But it does suck knowing the mileage and performance could be better. I'm also running stock tire pressure. Going to bump it up 3-5 PSI before a big roadtrip this weekend and see how much better the mileage will get.
I bought a used 2011 Prius with 124,000 miles on it. It was getting about 43 MPG when I purchased it. It had mismatched, cheap tires on it, like 3 different brands, only two of the tires were the same. Since then I've done 2 oil changes with 0w-20 Synthetic. Replaced the spark plugs. Ran through a 5 bottle fuel treatment. Fixed some underbody damage. And put on 4 brand new RT43 tires. I was just as concerned about all weather (including snow) traction and long life as I was about MPG. Right now I get between 48.5 to 49.5 MPG (4.85L/100km) and I'm at 137,000 miles so I've got about 10,000 miles on the tires. I'm sure the RT43s probably generate a bit more noise, and cause a 2-3 MPG fuel economy hit, but I'm willing to accept that for what I feel is better all weather traction and a good, solid, long lasting tire. I run mine at 42 PSI front and 40 PSI rear.
Update 2: So after the big road trip (was really only just ~400km worth of driving), I saw the mileage dip down to 4.2 L/100km on 99% highway driving. It probably could've been lower had I not tried to keep up with the flow of traffic at 120+ km/h for the first chunk of the trip. Once I settled down to 105-110km/h, I noticed the mileage improved quite a bit. I also overinflated the tires to 42/39 (+4 PSI). the previous low I had on my EP20's during a previous roadtrip was 3.8 (though I will admit, the style and terrain of these trips were quite different (slower country backroads (3.8) vs. fast multilane highway (4.2)). The mileage eventually went back up to 4.8 after getting back to town and doing 99% city driving. So I think it's fair to say, the defenders will reduce your mileage by ~10% over the EP20's. Which is actually more than I was expecting (I was thinking ~5%.
Update 3: I finally did a drive identical to one I did on my worn EP20's... EP20: 3.8L/100KM (61.9 mpg) Defenders: 4.5L/100km (52.3 mpg) This is 98% highway driving betwen 80-100km/h my Defenders have been driven for ~4 months now so hopefuly any "break-in" period is over. both tires pressurized above the door sticker pressure. As you can see, the drop in MPG is quite drastic. Much more than 10% as I was estimating before. this is more like 15%. I think in my calculations, 15% decrease in MPG still brings the Total cost of ownership below other tires (assuming they last as long as advertised). But It really comes down to the extra 2 years of mileage. if the defenders last 2 years longer, then it'll work out to be ~$20/year cheaper. If they last only 1 year longer, then it'll break even. If they last the same as other tires, then they'll cost $20/year more. I certainly miss seeing the milage start with a "3". it's basically impossible for me to see that anymore. If that's important to you, steer clear of these tires.
That's a very significant difference. So much that I'd speculate there's other factors, say same trip but different weather. Or maybe over passage of time, something else is making an impact on mpg, say an ailing 12 volt, or PCV, or EGR?
It's only been a difference of a year between the drives. And weather was identical (sunny, no rain, low 20's C). It pretty much agrees with my observed daily driving that's 99% city. I usually see a mileage of 5.2 -> 5.9 L/100km with the defenders while the EP20's ranged I was used to seeing a range of 4.8->5.4... This is with me not trying to hypermile. If I try hard to hypermile, I can know those values down an extra .2-.4 L/100km. but at that point, I'd be pissing off a lot of drivers
you should put your vehicle info in, i had to scroll all the way up to the first post to see what you were driving.