Just had some fitted, totally in the blind about them! Would like to know how they handle in the wet/corners, also winter and any opinions! Thanks
Got them on my Clio. Never had a problem. All this rubbish about poverty spec, ditch finders.
If you drive like a tw*t in poor conditions then you've only got yourself to blame.
Had them on for about 4000 miles now and had no issues - rain, snow, or in the dry. Then again, I'm not hooning around though.
If these are from the new line of nankang offerings, there are some positive reviews on them. I would say nankangs of old were ditchfinders the newer ones seem to be better.
You've kind of answered your own question there... The fact is they are a budget tyre which are never as good.
You tend to find how good your tyres are when you push them.
^^^ if your tyres are the ones above.
Do not listen to the 'sheep' they are getting rave reviews.
I remember posting about fitting RSR's few years back & had the same response....how times change
http://www.nankang-tyre.com/home.php?fn=eur/products_car_detail&lv1=1&lv2=7&no=12
My avatar is a Hankook RS2, remember them?
The holly grail is a good road & track tyre at a decent price.
NS2's are back on offer at Camskill too right now. £36.90 each in 205/40/17's. Bargain!
Look at the image that is not the same tyre?
And they are a good tyre? Seem cheap, too cheap maybe???
Cornering speeds are dictated more by the components between the seat and wheel than the tyres.
In fact, I'd dare venture that all those running Michelin Super-soft II Mega-not-quite-slicks are the ones more likely to visit a ditch or wall as they'll be convinced they have unending levels of grip.
Besides, it's a Clio, what's going to happen? Wild snap oversteer? No. Nose-dragging into a wall? More likely. Far easier to deal with, no matter if you've got track-spec rubber or greasy remoulds.
From my perspective, I'm just a brand-***** for tyres, EVO can say what it likes but I've not seen them do a group test of tyres with 5k miles under them.....that would be an interesting and more relevant test than doing 40/50 miles on some sticker-fresh boots.
Cornering speeds are dictated more by the components between the seat and wheel than the tyres.
The image posted earlier in the thread is a different variant of NS2 (Sportnex) I believe. These are Ultrasports. I'm running them on my car now.
Imprezaworks: The £37 quoted is in the size above, is correct for the Ultrasports, as they are in the picture on Camskills site.
Judging by their website and the information supplied they do put a lot of effort into research and tests and I'm guessing before they go on the UK market they have to go through EU checks? (or are they just imported?)
Ok, is it worth the risk then? Shall I swap from my AD08's to NS2's or RSR's?