HillWalker said:Anybody had any experience with All Season tyres, seems like the best of both worlds, and saves the hassle of buying spare wheels, was thinking of fitting them to our Skoda Yeti though, not the Z4, that'll be tucked up in the garage.
I've got Vredestein Quadrac 3 all seasons fitted to the Z3 which I use specifically during the winter and leave them on all year. When I had the Z4 it went straight into the garage end of Oct until the following March and will be doing the same with M135i. Those people who say they can sail through snow and ice with no problems on summer runflats are kidding themselves and at worse a danger to other road users, don't care what they say but summer runflats are dangerous in winter conditions.
I was in a quandry when deciding on full winters or all seasons but decided on the latter. Winter before last we had a good six to 10 inches of snow and I was amazed how the Z3 performed, no drama or wheelspin at normal throttle speeds even up snow covered hills. Obviously full winters are better still but I think all seasons are more than good enough where you get occasional bad weather.
I remember in 2010 when we had a bad winter I got stranded in my 118d M Sport on 18" runflats in a paltry 3" of snow, the car was simply undriveable no matter how you used the traction control or throttle, it was 3 weeks until I could drive it again until all the snow and ice had cleared. After that I was always stressing when there was snow forecast so took the plunge and bought a set of BMW winter wheels with Dunlops. It simply took away all the stress of driving with insufficient tyres.
Tim.

