Tire recommendation needed

PolkCityClone

Well-Known Member
Mar 24, 2006
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Have to replace all four tires on my Camry. The Bridgestones that it came with were worthless. Any recommendations for a reasonable tire for Iowa weather?
 

dmclone

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Oct 20, 2006
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I would check the tire rack reviews specific to the Camry and then go buy them at Costco.
 

jamesfnb

Well-Known Member
Apr 9, 2006
1,231
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My friend (who owns a auto repair shop) talked me into Cooper tires about 10 years ago and I have no complaints since. Not sure on an exact model though, sorry.
 

dmclone

Well-Known Member
Oct 20, 2006
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All these companies have both good and tires. I would worry less about brands and more into specific models.
 

clone0

Member
Apr 10, 2006
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I replaced the poor Bridgestones tires on my Camry at 29,000....went with the Michelin - Pilot® Exalto® A/S at Costco. Good tire.
 

ragingbull174

Member
Jul 12, 2009
41
0
6
I have a set of bf goodrich's on mine from sam's club work real good on snow/ice. When selecting tires around here for traction stick your nail into them and if the tire is soft they're a good traction tire if it seems hard they're more for mileage.
 

jdoggivjc

Well-Known Member
Sep 27, 2006
59,519
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Macomb, MI
No Costco in my area. Went to Sears - happy with the tires, very happy with the service (although I'm pretty sure someone else here won't recommend Sears, and that's fine - just saying my family and I have always had pretty good experiences with them).
 

RandomFan

Well-Known Member
Aug 11, 2009
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I have, and love, Firestone Transforce AT's...but that's for my pickups, so it's completely irrelevant. :biggrin:
 

usedcarguy

Well-Known Member
Apr 12, 2008
5,558
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Ames
For the money, I've had good luck with the Kumho Solus line. The KR21's are a long life tire, but an 70,000 plus mile tire is hard over bumps caused by frost heaving on Iowa's roads. For a little softer ride, they offer the KR16.

Should be able to buy them for around $60-65 per tire. I also love the Michelin MXV4's, but look to spend twice as much.
 

CloneGuy8

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Mar 20, 2017
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Bump. Tire question; I recently bought a truck and it will need new tires. Whenever I put in the model online, it shows a 235 tire. When I look at the tires on my truck, they are a 245 tire. Will either size work? I assume I should go w/ what is shown online, but not sure why the current ones are 245.
 

g4ce

Well-Known Member
Feb 6, 2018
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The 245 number is the width. 235 vs 245 isn't much difference. More than likely the previous owner found a deal on the 245s and put them on. Bigger difference would be the sidewall height which is the second number. You can compare tire sizes using a site like this: https://tiresize.com/comparison/

In most cases you want to keep the overall height(circumference) of the tire the same as it was originally. You can change the width(235 vs 245) but then should find the appropriate height(second number) that corresponds to that width. Hopefully that makes sense. The height of a tire(second number) is a ratio of the width.

As an example:

235/75R15 has a width of 9.3" and a height of 28.9" whereas
245/75R15 has a width of 9.6" and a height of 29.5"
 
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jsb

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Mar 7, 2008
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Bump. Tire question; I recently bought a truck and it will need new tires. Whenever I put in the model online, it shows a 235 tire. When I look at the tires on my truck, they are a 245 tire. Will either size work? I assume I should go w/ what is shown online, but not sure why the current ones are 245.

On my last car I got a set of snow tires that was slightly bigger. The only difference was that my speedometer was slightly off.
 

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