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Good idea - next trip to Breck I'll give that a go.OK got this tip in the mountain today. I have never done this, but the tip is spray some WD-40 in the wheel well to stop snow accumulation. I will try it this week and let you know. It seems to make sense.
Good idea - next trip to Breck I'll give that a go.
One other potential tip - I'm having our General Grabber AT2s "siped" tomorrow at Discount Tire. It is suppose to help with ice braking (more edges biting the ice) - we'll see if it does or not. For $10/tire, I figured it was worth a shot (I just got my snow tires on the BMW and they have tons of "sipes" from the factory, so I figured why not - I'll give it a go). I'll post up my experience when we get some ice.
-Rich
Excellent argument, and you make a lot of sense.Personally, I think Discount's tire siping is a load. Tread design is scientific, not universal. Sipes of the right kind can do good, as on a winter tire, but adding sipes won't make your AT2s into winter tires as winter tire compounds are much different (softer, compliant in cold), for one reason. Performance in different conditions is probably more explained by the ratio of tread blocks to voids, their arrangements and the compounds that follow many hours of engineering and testing than from a few hundred small cuts added to those black round things that most drivers don't even notice until one goes flat. If I made tires, I would dishonor any warranty claim on a siped tire. Siping design is also one size for all, and I assure you that Discount conducted no studies to find out whether its sipe pattern will not actually weaken a tread block under stress on all tires to which it is applied, or that siping actually improved your AT2s (PS2s, TripleTreads, Potenzas, etc.). Bottom line for me is that if sipes were universally beneficial and DT can do it so profitably for just $10 per tire, imagine that it would cost tire makers nothing to add them to their molds or manufacturing processes -- yet not one company does so to gain a marketing advantage.