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Sorry, I do not remember and the rating is not on the outer sidewall to see. I will check in with Discount Tire when I am there next week and post back here.

I agree that 130 MPH is way more than enough for a SUV.
OEM is V-rated at 149 mph so that is the standard replacement ;-)

It's outlined on the sidewall it will say either 105V or 105H.
 
I'd be interested to hear someone's review of the Continental CROSS CONTACT LX 25 tires.
I have 57k miles on 225/55/19 LX25s, albeit on a cx5. Mine is the 250hp/310tq model. The tires do very well in rain, snow, dry, and even glare ice the vehicle accelerated although stopping, it slid off the road sideways...more a testament to mazdas awesome awd system than anytbing else really that I could accelerate up hill in those conditions, lol!

The tire is quiet, does not tramline, and has no bad habits. Traction loss in aggressive cornering is linear, predictable, and audible. The closest it comes to a bad habit is low speed bumps are somewhat poorly damped. The tire offers decent feedback, given the fat 55 series sidewall, but handles rapid transitions like a touring tire, not a Pilot Sport Cup.

In the rain, as well as dry, 0-60 is a hair under 7 seconds. No traction loss at all occurs under WOT from a stop or on the 1-2 shift, even with 310tq at 2000rpm, whether rain or dry. Again, mazda has an amazing awd system. The only traction loss issue occurs on violent downshifts when passing in the rain crossing painted road markings, and the ecu cuts some power.

In short, they are an excellent tire, I get about 50k miles from them before 3/32, and I am warring between these and CC2s. I will not drive a prime on factory tires. They're trash and a safety hazard if they are like the oem toyo a36 my mazda had.

Mpg did not change enough to note vs oem a36. My lofetime avg is 26.9, and epa highway ratong is 27
 
I have 57k miles on 225/55/19 LX25s, albeit on a cx5. Mine is the 250hp/310tq model. The tires do very well in rain, snow, dry, and even glare ice the vehicle accelerated although stopping, it slid off the road sideways...more a testament to mazdas awesome awd system than anytbing else really that I could accelerate up hill in those conditions, lol!

The tire is quiet, does not tramline, and has no bad habits. Traction loss in aggressive cornering is linear, predictable, and audible. The closest it comes to a bad habit is low speed bumps are somewhat poorly damped. The tire offers decent feedback, given the fat 55 series sidewall, but handles rapid transitions like a touring tire, not a Pilot Sport Cup.

In the rain, as well as dry, 0-60 is a hair under 7 seconds. No traction loss at all occurs under WOT from a stop or on the 1-2 shift, even with 310tq at 2000rpm, whether rain or dry. Again, mazda has an amazing awd system. The only traction loss issue occurs on violent downshifts when passing in the rain crossing painted road markings, and the ecu cuts some power.

In short, they are an excellent tire, I get about 50k miles from them before 3/32, and I am warring between these and CC2s. I will not drive a prime on factory tires. They're trash and a safety hazard if they are like the oem toyo a36 my mazda had.

Mpg did not change enough to note vs oem a36. My lofetime avg is 26.9, and epa highway ratong is 27
Thanx for your reply. I've had these on other cars and liked them. Not a fan of the look or road noise of the CC2's.
Sounds like they'll be fine on my R4P.
 
Do they dead hook when you floor it with TC off? How has treadware been?
This is in Auto EV/HV Sport mode. No pre-revving, just foot to the floor. TC was enabled, but I did not notice any tire slip and the slip indicator light near the power needle did not illuminate.


I will try to remember to repeat at some point, disable TC and make sure ICE is on and revving a bit with the brake on before launch.

Can't really say anything about treadwear yet, but I don't see anything abnormal.
 
I know this is an old thread, but I wanted to thank the original poster for the excellent review on the Michelin CrossClimate 2 tires. How many miles did you have on the Avid GTs before you switched?

I have a Prime XSE with the Avid GT tires. They are terrible in the wet and snow. I think I have hydroplaned this vehicle more than any other I have had. With the free Toyota service I was rotating the Avid GTs every 5k miles, however I was busy and waited 10k for my last rotation. The tires now have 31k on them hum loudly and have a helicopter type sound. I've read that these tires don't wear nicely but this seems excessive. I've put 1k miles on and they still hum even at slow speeds.

How many miles are people getting out of the Avid GTs? Is this normal for these tires. I can't imagine a wheel bearing or something all of a sudden went bad when I went in for service. I think it must be the front to back wear pattern difference.

I plan to get a set of CrossCilmate 2s at Costco soon. Thanks again for your review.
 
Discussion starter · #52 ·
I am the original reviewer/creater of this thread. I got 98 miles out my Avids — for I hated them driving home and first thing was to order the CC2’s that very afternoon. I am amazed you got 31K out of yours. If me, I would get them off as soon as you can. They never cornered well for me, were fighting for grip at 5/10’s cornering. Hopefully Costco can get you a set an mounted on your car YESTERDAY (jj). Good luck in getting your new real tires soonest. You will be a happy camper as soon as they are on. However as with all new tires, and as recommended by every tire manufacturer, please take it gently on them the first 200 miles as their mold release compound slowly wear off over that length of time.

You are soon going to experience how well our RAV4 Prime can do, and you will be amazing in the snow how well they perform for you. I bought them primarily for rain use in our winter months (Pacific Northwest) and they consistentry do really well on wet pavement. I am a bearcat on rotating (front to back, side to side) every 5,000 to 5,500 miles and I never run them under 35 PSI.

Two more suggestions if I might, when Costco mounts them, please insure they “road force balance them.” And I always insure that they do not use a lot of weight on any one of them. If they need more than 1 1/2 ounces, I insist on them (which they can do well on a Hunter Road Force balance machine or equivalent), take the tire back off and rotate the tires on the wheel so that natural imbalances in both counteract each other (leading to least amount of wheel weights). Also have then initially do a run-out check to insure your wheels do not have excessive run out (bent or other lack or center axis symmetry). A wheel with excessive run out needs to be fixed (if possible) before a new tire is put one or immediately thereafter to insure lack of vibrations, excellent tire tread life and pleased driver and passengers.

Sorry if you are already a tire specialist for it so this might be a ”preachy” post. Just trying to be educational for I have driven over 2,500,000 miles in my life and know a fair amount about tires and wheels.

Hope this helps and that are you are smiling soon!
 
Wow...thank you for the very informative post! I have never heard of "road force balancing," but looked it up and it makes total sense. And I'm no car novice. I used to work on old cars and have put in transmissions myself. I've driven 150+ miles / day for the last 10 years, so I've gone through a lot of tires. I got them all at Costco and never had any problems.

Yeah, the Avid GTs are horrible. They repainted the crosswalk right at the end of my street and my tires currently squeak super loud when making the turn over it. No one else's tires do that. Cornering is horrible. And I can't accelerate quickly from a stop with sport mode because the tires just spin and squeal.

For your CrossClimate 2s you said you rotate side to side as well as front to back. The tires are directional. I assume you must be demounting and remounting to the other side. I've always only done front to back. And my friend who owns an automotive shop only does front to back for all vehicles.

I always try to get my money's worth from the stock tires on any vehicle. Sound's like I should have gotten rid of them sooner.

Thanks again!
 
Discussion starter · #54 ·
No, and I double checked this, I do not diamount any tire from any wheel, but specific to the Prime, Toyota and Discount Tire both say, move the front right wheel/tire assembly straight back to the right rear, moving the right rear wheel/tire assembly straight forward to the right front.

Same front to back switch on the left side. Putting this another way, I have 23,300 miles on my CC2’s, will take a picture of them and post next, and my right tires have only moved backwards and forwards on that side. , my left tires have only moved backward on forward on that side. I will got get a picture of one of their tread at this point. and will be posting shortly.
 
Discussion starter · #56 · (Edited)
Both above pics of my right front tire (as I am sure you figured out). I am super happy with my Discount Tire store for if ever, and it happens sometime,s I do not get the advertised mileage on my tires (all my tires are always Michelins), they will credit the missing mileage on the replacement set, so if I were to only get 45,000 miles on an advertised 50,000 mile rated tire, they will give me 10% off on my replacement set. And free Hunter force re-balancing and tire rotation for life. I think Costco might do same and I also know at times Costco’s tire pricing is the best.
 
Thanks for confirming the rotation pattern. I ordered them from Costco and they should be in next week. I can't wait...the noise the stock tires are producing is unbearable even at 25mph. I noticed today when hitting a sewer cover, the traction control light came on...that's how much the Avid GTs slip!

Costco does the same thing with wear warranty and with unrepairable tire replacement. Thanks for the pics. I love the unique look to them.
 
I noticed today when hitting a sewer cover, the traction control light came on...that's how much the Avid GTs slip!
Glad to see its not just me. I've driven the same road for the last 15 years in a mix of cars and now every time I drive a particular hill my tyre spins on a manhole cover. Its really unnerving.

Also notice that if travelling on country roads maybe 20-30mph the car keeps going despite locking the brakes - as thought he Avids are just not gripping the road. Again not just my driving style as its not happening in other comparable vehicles.

I'll take the few mpg difference with the Michelins - the cost of repairing damage if I fail to stop is going to be a lot higher.
 
Glad to see its not just me. I've driven the same road for the last 15 years in a mix of cars and now every time I drive a particular hill my tyre spins on a manhole cover. Its really unnerving.

Also notice that if travelling on country roads maybe 20-30mph the car keeps going despite locking the brakes - as thought he Avids are just not gripping the road. Again not just my driving style as its not happening in other comparable vehicles.

I'll take the few mpg difference with the Michelins - the cost of repairing damage if I fail to stop is going to be a lot higher.
How many miles do you have on the tires? I think Toyota put these on to increase the MPG numbers.
 
Glad to see its not just me. I've driven the same road for the last 15 years in a mix of cars and now every time I drive a particular hill my tyre spins on a manhole cover. Its really unnerving.

Also notice that if travelling on country roads maybe 20-30mph the car keeps going despite locking the brakes - as thought he Avids are just not gripping the road. Again not just my driving style as its not happening in other comparable vehicles.

I'll take the few mpg difference with the Michelins - the cost of repairing damage if I fail to stop is going to be a lot higher.
One year and 9K miles so far on my set of CC2. I get mid 50s EV range and over 40 mpg around town in HV mode except for winter, which is good enough for me. Highway mileage at 70 mph or higher has been below EPA ratings for me, but I suspect that also has to do with aerodynamics. Not having eco tires is probably a contributor. The CC2 do seem to pick up a lot more small rocks on gravel roads, but otherwise no complaints and no similar concerns so far with grip on dry, wet, snow or ice.
 
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