Tires Toyo or OEM Subaru
22” Toyo Celsius A/S in urban New England; ~80% of my driving is short trips in city or light traffic. I got about 25k out of my last set.
TOYO CELCIUS SPORT 225/55R17 101V XL
not the standard answer but been really really happy with theseo
Well I have a 24 Limited with the 20s and live 2 miles up a dirt road. The tires are fine to me. I have an outback and tundra with 18s and don't notice much difference.
My Chrysler 300S 5.7 does shockingly well in medium snow. Blizzard conditions are not acceptable for that car, so give me a Subaru Legacy GT Limited Spec B with Blizzaks
I have a 25 yo Subaru Impreza RS that is completely unaffected by snow. That is as long as I put proper snow tires on in the winter, I forgot to switch one winter before a storm and my summer tires were pointless to say the least.
I’d recommend Toyo Extensa A/S II. I’ve got close to your size and found them to be very nice driving and quiet. Bought them last October for $107 each from Discount Tire in AZ.
I run Toyo 35x12.50s ATs on my f150. They’re pretty nice for winter and I don’t hear them at all. I had Falken M/Ts on my Tacoma and wasn’t a fan of them.
Now, here is the weak link for the CCX-70- and CX-90: The factory tires (Toyo Open Country A51 on our CX-70) are highway touring tread, only 8/32" tread depth brand new, and a very tame and dry pavement oriented tread pattern designed for quiet ride. We live in the midwest and I am kicking around swapping out the tires, but therein lies another constraint, at least on our model: It has 19" rims and factory installed Toyo's are 265/55R19 size (109V load rating). That is an oddball/rare tire size.
2019 F150 2wd on 2.5 level. 1st pic is 33inch tires and the second is 35/12.5/20 toyo mt’s. Not really digging this set up. $500 mistake.
Toyo & Nitto Tire Recall Alert
If you’re running Toyo or Nitto tires, take a minute to check your setup—there’s an official recall that could affect your safety.
An isolated issue in the belt manufacturing process may cause the tread or belt to separate while driving. This can lead to reduced control and increase the risk of a crash.
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