|
|||||||
| View Poll Results: skinny or wide tires in snow? | |||
| Skinny tires are better in snow. |
|
13 | 72.22% |
| Wide tires are better in snow. |
|
0 | 0% |
| The pros/cons of each balance out. |
|
1 | 5.56% |
| Why the LT1 are you posting about skinny and wide tires? |
|
4 | 22.22% |
| Voters: 18. You may not vote on this poll | |||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
Whats your opinion? Seems to me on here once in a while the comparison of RWD vs. FWD snow driving cars comes up once in a while. Heres a different topis I often think about. Obv wider tires are better on dry pavement, more surface area = more wheel contact = more grip to the street = less spin. But for winter driving like in slush and packed snow (as most roads are as of right now) my belief is that skinnier tires are better since they dig and cut through better. I think you get a much better bite where wider tires are more prone to spin, even with the wider surface area and more contact I think it makes it spin easier. I have fairly skinny tires on the brown truck and on my saturn and can feel the dig. But I'm my moms expo with wide fat tires and my gf's wide saturn tires I think they spin a little easier but still grab pretty good.... What are your opinions?
__________________
![]() 95 Z28 hard top - LT1 | 4L60e | bolt ons | Yank SS3600 | suspension | viking coil overs | 3.42 10 bolt | 3520 lbs - 12.331 @ 108.22mph 1.668 60' 08 Saab 9-7x - L96 6.0 swap | L92 heads/intake/TB | LS6 cam | LS9 springs | 7.425" hardened pushrods | CAI | 1-3/4" stepped LT's | catback | 4L60E | FTI 3000 278mm converter |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|