Quote:
Originally Posted by multicartual
How?
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It's worthwhile to note that this is on a light pickup truck.
We had a good set of winter tires installed, pretty popular brand/model. These tires were incredible in snow, they'd push a front heavy truck up a hill without spinning.
Since money is a concern when it comes to tires, we kept running the winters for a while after the snow stopped falling.
What we discovered is that the truck is scary to drive in the rain with the winter tires installed, at half throttle going up a hill, the rear wheels would not stop spinning. If you let off and got back into the gas, the result would be the same.
This was all on tires that still had excellent tread, they were a maximum of three months old, they would let loose turning in an intersection on a less than drenched road.
I've concluded that winter tires are really only designed to tackle snow, which makes sense, it's why they are called
winter tires. They are satisfactory on dry roads, but they seemingly turn into hard plastic when it rains.