300M Tires

Discussion in 'Chrysler 300' started by Sharkman, Jul 16, 2004.

  1. Sharkman

    Sharkman Guest

    So my 2002 300M is going to need new tires after the summer. Any
    recommendations? The Michelin MXV Plus are on it now. I use the vehicle for
    pleasure. No really hard driving.
    Thanks
    sharkman
     
    Sharkman, Jul 16, 2004
    #1
  2. Sharkman

    Art Guest

    Depending on your wheel size you may be quite limited. My 99 came with
    Goodyears that had to be replaced twice for vibrations so I would not
    recommend those. I switched to the tire you are now replacing.
     
    Art, Jul 16, 2004
    #2
  3. Sharkman

    Richard Guest

    The new to market Mich Hydroedge and the Goodyear copy are good tires to
    consider, especially if long wear and wet and snow are conditions you must
    deal with.

    Richard.
     
    Richard, Jul 16, 2004
    #3
  4. I highly agree with Richard regarding the Michelin Hydroedge. I have had
    them for about 6 months and am very pleased with their performance.

    Arthur
     
    Arthur Alspector, Jul 16, 2004
    #4
  5. I'm Real happy with the Continentals I put on my '99 to replace the
    worthless OEM Goodyears.

    Jim
     
    Jim Shulthiess, Jul 16, 2004
    #5
  6. Sharkman

    Bill Putney Guest

    If you don't want to pay that much money and still get a very good tire
    (extremely quiet, good hydroplane resistance, and very good treadwear -
    620/70k miles and from my over 25k miles experience so far they will
    live up to that), consider the Cooper Touring SLE T-rated. I had
    reported here a few months ago that I was disappointed that one had gone
    out of round - tire dealer replaced it at no cost, but it happened
    again, and it turned out that it was a simple matter of rebalancing - I
    suspect that I may have thrown a weight or two, as the last/first 3/4
    mile of my daily commute is down a pot-holed gravel road.

    I've been so happy with them that between my daughter's and my wife's
    cars, I bought 6 more Toruing SLE's last month. Made my wife's Buick
    Century even more quiet than it already was, which I didn't think was
    possible - she even made an unsolicited comment to me about it after her
    first day of driving with them.

    Bill Putney
    (to reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with "x")
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 17, 2004
    #6
  7. Sharkman

    MoPar Man Guest

    Do you have 17" or 16" rims?

    (or 18" - ?)

    The hydro-edge is the best-ranked "All Season" tire according to the
    charts at tirerack.com:

    http://www.tirerack.com/tires/surveyresults/surveydisplay.jsp?type=AS

    "The HydroEdge radial is Michelin's premium Passenger All-Season tire
    designed to meet the needs of the drivers of family coupes, sedans and
    minivans. It was developed to be a very versatile tire by combining
    long wear with hydroplaning resistance and year-round traction, even
    in light snow."

    Continental's tires don't seem to be in the "all season" catagory -
    instead they are found in the "Grand Touring All Season" catagory -
    along with the Michelin Energy MXV4 / and Plus. Both have a heck of a
    lot of survey miles reported (22 and 10 million respectively - among
    the most of all tires in that catagory). Both the Michelin and
    Continental rank near the bottom of that catagory when compared to the
    top tire - Bridgestone Turanza LS-Z. The best Continental in this
    catagory seems to be the ContiPremierContact.

    http://www.tirerack.com/tires/surveyresults/surveydisplay.jsp?type=GTAS

    I have Dunlop SP Sport 5000 Asymmetrical on my 300M (Ultra High
    Performance All Season) and use them as summer-only tires (have
    separate rims for snow tires). I would have bought Firestone Firehawk
    SZ50's but they don't make them for 225/55/17 rims.
     
    MoPar Man, Jul 17, 2004
    #7
  8. Sharkman

    Sharkman Guest

    Thanks for the info... I'll check them all out...
     
    Sharkman, Jul 17, 2004
    #8
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