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So the tires perform well in deep snow, but what about during the rest of our Prairie winter? Aside from snow traction, I typically look for how well the tires perform on ice as well as on dry and wet pavement (both warm and cold). Noise is a factor as well – and every driver will want a different blend of characteristics from their tires.
For me, it’s the deep snow and ice traction that matter. I’m willing to put up with sloppier dry handling and a bit of road noise Save if I’m confident the tires will pull through for me in an emergency situation on slippery roads.
I had the tires installed in November, allowing me to appreciate that these are pretty decent tires on dry pavement and in the wet stuff. Road noise is only an issue on wet pavement, and the tires didn’t exhibit as much of that squishy feel that I have come to expect from good winter rubber.
The imprecise handling I mentioned is normally attributed to the aforementioned lateral siping. The deep, narrow strips of tread that result are flexible and provide more edges or “blades” with which the tire grips the road. But while being flexible aids the tires’ bite on a slippery surface, it doesn’t do much for steering response or road feel.
The Nordics use a unique technology called “bubble blade” to add stiffness to the treads. Each blade has a convex bubble on one side and a concave one on the other, so when the blades want to flex, the adjacent ones interlock to reduce the relative movement between the blades and stiffen up the tread blocks.
Goodyear only partially accomplished their goals with this technology, because while the tread blocks are stiffer than they would be without the bubbles, they are also less effective on ice, and that’s where the Nordic gives way to the class leaders in winter tires. Having said that, they still get a passing grade and there’s absolutely no question as to the advantage of driving through winter with a set of these versus the three-season tires that likely came on your car. And the Nordics are studdable, which should enhance their ice performance at the expense of increased noise on the road.
So would I recommend these tires? Absolutely. For those who would like to feel safer behind the wheel this winter but need the price to be manageable, it’s a logical choice.
Haney Louka is a Professional Engineer, a member of the Automobile Journalists Association of Canada, and a long time automotive enthusiast |