Tires COMFORSER or OEM Subaru
My 22 WRX was also good in the snow, there was times where people were getting stuck especially on hills and I would just cruise by with no issues. I had pilot sport all season 4 tires which are only meant for light snow and I had no issues.
Years ago I was door dashing, had a really nice set of snow tires on my legacy. That thing is a beast in the snow; one lady came to the door and apologized for not having shoveled. I handed her food over and said "no worries" and brapped my out of her driveway while she watched me essentially plow it with my bumper, easily walked thru 8+ inches of snow without missing a beat.
I put snow tires on the day before a pretty good snowfall in Northeast Pa. This is my first WRX, I burned a half tank and had the time of my life. 10/10 best car ive driven in the snow
I run snows on the '03 Outback and the '21 Mazda, I have a very early, 20+ mile commute to work, and live in the snow belt. So, roads are generally not plowed. They both do great on unplowed roads.
Budget for snow tires. AWD is not magic, and you generally can't use chains with AWD systems. In terms of cars, Subarus are good and reliable. I've owned two Foresters.
With snow tires on my accord I was more successful than many Subaru owners who were stuck in the ditch.
Comforser are well-known tires and they offer great traction and performance. Comforser off-road tires can easily handle deep muddy terrains and manage to maintain forward motion at all times. On the other hand, this tire brand is a little bit noisy, but they are great for highway use. Being manufactured in China, Comforser Tyres can offer the latest tyre technology which improves longevity, fuel consumption and performance in both wet and dry road conditions.
Ive got comforser 1100’s on the truck they are pretty common around here.good in snow and mud, they are ok on the highway I’ve put 75000km on them and am only about halfway through their lifespan and average 9.2l/100 (~26mpg.)with the babydiesel going about 130-140km/h (80-90mph) the biggest issue is they have to be rotated every oil change and aren’t as good as more expensive options in the rain.
Year old post I know, but a couple days ago my grandpa took my car to go get only my spare tyre changed, I come back from work and I see a pair of Comforser Cf510s on my VT Commodore. Didn’t think they could be THIS bad in the wet, I genuinely can’t even accelerate slightly faster than usual, my wheels just spin uncontrollably.
Yes, they’re cheap, and yes they hold on well enough in the dry and make the fun 1970s police chase tyre squeal noise, but when there is even the slightest moisture on the road, and I mean just a bit of damp or drizzle, they lose ALL grip. They are genuinely dangerous and should not be for sale anywhere that rains.
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