Breaker said:Actually a nice touch on the Evoque is a winter setting in the computer that parks the wipers center windscreen when the ignition is switched off to help unfreezing them with the heated screen.
My first td4 pure had all season Pirelli scorpion verde tyres that performed brilliantly in snow, but my new sd4 dynamic has continental cross contacts which I believe are more summer/road biased. Should find out how they perform this week as it's currently snowing in Redcar which is only 25 miles away...TitanTim said:Breaker said:Actually a nice touch on the Evoque is a winter setting in the computer that parks the wipers center windscreen when the ignition is switched off to help unfreezing them with the heated screen.
Does the Evoque have winter or summer tyres fitted?
Tim.
ronk said:I wonder how long it will be before winter rubber becomes mandatory in the UK?
gwatson said:The sooner the better, certainly in Scotland anyway. People are making the shift though, big uptake in the last couple of years.
You insurance small print will say "vehicle must be fitted with appropriate tyres for the conditions". I'm surprised they've not started using that clause to get out of paying up!!
TitanTim said:Breaker said:Actually a nice touch on the Evoque is a winter setting in the computer that parks the wipers center windscreen when the ignition is switched off to help unfreezing them with the heated screen.
Does the Evoque have winter or summer tyres fitted?
Tim.
ronk said:I stayed at an hotel in the Italian alps last year and the owner had a Range Rover sport fitted with the standard Pirelli rubber - If I say that he used his wife's fiesta in the winter that says it all. He told me that the RR sport was like a 3 tonne sledge on the downhills. He said that it scared him!
Stopping is probably more important than progress in the slippy stuff - I reckon the zed with proper rubber on all four will be the better bet in that respect.
I have wintracs on my D3 and cant fault it.
Breaker said:The real problem with driving in snow isn't always you though! It's having someone slide into you who can't stop!!
Breaker said:ronk said:I stayed at an hotel in the Italian alps last year and the owner had a Range Rover sport fitted with the standard Pirelli rubber - If I say that he used his wife's fiesta in the winter that says it all. He told me that the RR sport was like a 3 tonne sledge on the downhills. He said that it scared him!
Stopping is probably more important than progress in the slippy stuff - I reckon the zed with proper rubber on all four will be the better bet in that respect.
I have wintracs on my D3 and cant fault it.
Sounds like the guy needed an RRS offload driving course to teach him how to use the various systems on the car, especially the hill decent control!I've driven the new RRS on the off road course at Gaydon and that thing will do anything!
ZermattV said:- RRS comes as std with a very summer biased tyre ---