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New Michelin tire improves as it ages

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Old 01-14-14, 05:04 PM
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Hoovey689
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Default New Michelin tire improves as it ages

New Michelin tire improves as it ages



PRESS RELEASE - MICHELIN SETS NEW STANDARD IN AUTOMOTIVE SAFETY WITH MICHELIN® PREMIER® A/S TIRE

Revolutionary Tread Design Evolves To Maintain Grip Even When Worn

DETROIT (Jan. 14, 2014) – Today at the North American International Auto Show, Michelin introduced the MICHELIN® Premier® A/S tire with revolutionary new EverGripTM technology, which provides drivers with exceptional levels of safety even as their tires wear down. Even when worn, the MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGripTM technology stops shorter on wet roads than the leading competitors' brand new tires1.

Available this spring, the MICHELIN® Premier® A/S tire combines hidden grooves that emerge as the tire wears down, expanding rain grooves that widen over time to continue to evacuate water and a unique rubber compound for increased wet grip.

"The MICHELIN Premier A/S tire represents a significant breakthrough in automotive safety," said Scott Clark, chief operating officer of Michelin North America's passenger and light truck tire division. "With our truly revolutionary advancements in tire technology, we are able to directly address the effects of tire wear on traction and have been able to break the traditional paradigm."

Tires rely on grooves between the treads to evacuate water and maintain grip with the road. Until now, tires traditionally lost traction in wet conditions as the tread became worn and grooves lost depth decreasing the tire's ability to funnel water away, increasing stopping distances and the chances of hydroplaning. Wet traction is particularly important for automotive safety because drivers are more than twice as likely to be in an accident on wet roads compared to dry roads.2

Unlike conventional tires, the MICHELIN Premier A/S tire uses a revolutionary design with a unique set of features to maintain wet traction even as the tire becomes worn. MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip uses three main elements to provide this traction over time:
High-traction Compound: MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip features a proprietary rubber compound with extreme amounts of silica and sunflower oil. The silica provides the bonding strength and adherence to keep the treads on the road for high traction in wet conditions. The sunflower oil allows the tire to grip on wet roads at lower temperatures. These ingredients are mixed through an exacting process that ensures a consistent material contacting the road both when new and worn.
Expanding Rain Grooves: In most tires, as the rain grooves lose depth, the amount of water they can funnel away from the tire is diminished. MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip has rain grooves positioned around the circumference of the tire with a special geometric shape that gets wider as the tread wears. This helps maintain the amount of water that the tire can channel away even as these rain grooves lose depth.
Emerging Grooves: Initially hidden when the tire is new, MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip has another set of grooves along the tire's shoulder that emerge as the tire becomes worn. More than 150 hidden grooves emerge to provide additional help in channeling water away and maintaining wet traction as miles are logged.
These three elements work together to give MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip exceptional traction in a range of conditions year round. The MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip provides consumers with shorter stopping, hydroplaning resistance and increased grip when new and worn.

"The MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip is a compelling new safety technology that helps keep the driver in control and the car firmly planted on the road, said Clark. "EverGrip continues Michelin's industry-leading commitment to research and development of tire technology."

The MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip will be introduced in the spring and initially will be available in 32 sizes (185/65R15 – 245/45R18) fitting a range of passenger cars including the Cadillac CTS, Ford Fusion, Nissan Altima and Toyota Camry among others. Michelin will offer a limited 60,000-mile warranty with MICHELIN Premier A/S, which will be manufactured in North America at Michelin plants in Lexington and Greenville, S.C., Ardmore, Okla., and Pictou County and Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.

The MICHELIN Premier A/S with EverGrip is the latest innovation in Michelin's long history of introducing breakthroughs in the tire industry. In 1946, Michelin introduced the radial tire – a special radial ply design now almost universally used in tires that makes them both durable and flexible. In 1992, Michelin was the first tire maker to use silica widely, silica gives tires low-rolling resistance for improved fuel efficiency and improved grip for performance.

Dedicated to the improvement of sustainable mobility, Michelin designs, manufactures and sells tires for every type of vehicle, including airplanes, automobiles, bicycles, earthmovers, farm equipment, heavy-duty trucks and motorcycles. The company also publishes travel guides, hotel and restaurant guides, maps and road atlases. Headquartered in Greenville, S.C., Michelin North America (www.michelinman.com) employs more than 22,000 and operates 19 major manufacturing plants in 16 locations.
http://www.autoblog.com/2014/01/14/m...es-as-it-ages/
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Old 01-14-14, 05:51 PM
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frikkin witchcraft, i swear.
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Old 01-14-14, 06:18 PM
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^^ bahahaha

Amazing how far tire tech has come though
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Old 01-15-14, 02:37 AM
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Interesting. May be worth a try when it's time to replace my all season winter/early spring tires.
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Old 01-15-14, 06:26 AM
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I guess its French thing
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Old 01-15-14, 10:22 AM
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Originally Posted by Harbinger
Interesting. May be worth a try when it's time to replace my all season winter/early spring tires.
Would love to hear your feedback if you do so
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Old 01-15-14, 10:30 AM
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mmarshall
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Although this doesn't necessarily apply to wet conditions, any tire, to an extent, improves its dry-grip/traction somewhat as it breaks in and wears a little. That's why some auto-manufacturers used to cheat when they gave out their press-cars for review. They'd purposely shave the treads down slightly to try and insure that their cars, in the hands of journalists/reviewers, would get better skidpad/slalom/braking figures than they would (otherwise) have gotten with brand-new tires.
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Old 01-15-14, 02:24 PM
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Dammit! 2 months ago I bought a new set of Michelin pilot sport A/S 3 tires for spring/summer ...
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Old 01-21-14, 10:59 PM
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Check out Continental DWS (Dry Wet Snow) as they wear you can see the letter to desgignate what they can stlll drive on, pretty cool comfort/performance tire which never usually go together. I'm putting them on my Porsche
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Old 01-22-14, 06:05 AM
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Originally Posted by toy4two
Check out Continental DWS (Dry Wet Snow) as they wear you can see the letter to desgignate what they can stlll drive on, pretty cool comfort/performance tire which never usually go together. I'm putting them on my Porsche
I have them on my CLS63, theyre a great tire!! I took my CLS63 out in the snow and these tired performed really well, dry summer traction is also great.
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Old 01-22-14, 11:15 AM
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Originally Posted by toy4two
Check out Continental DWS (Dry Wet Snow) as they wear you can see the letter to desgignate what they can stlll drive on, pretty cool comfort/performance tire which never usually go together. I'm putting them on my Porsche
That's a great Idea. More tire manufacturers should implement something similar
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Old 01-27-14, 03:56 PM
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Originally Posted by mmarshall
Although this doesn't necessarily apply to wet conditions, any tire, to an extent, improves its dry-grip/traction somewhat as it breaks in and wears a little. That's why some auto-manufacturers used to cheat when they gave out their press-cars for review. They'd purposely shave the treads down slightly to try and insure that their cars, in the hands of journalists/reviewers, would get better skidpad/slalom/braking figures than they would (otherwise) have gotten with brand-new tires.
I was in charge of press car "tweeking" of the multi-brand A&M Specialists press fleet from 2000-2003. Never had authorization or time to shave tires, but sometimes would get tires highspeed on the car balanced. When the preproduction 2002 WRXs came in with standard 16" tires Subaru also sent 2 sets of the optional BBS 17" wheels with tires. Once a 17" set tread depth wore below half tread I would only install it for magazines known to test for handling "numbers". Other magazines got the new 17" set.
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Old 01-27-14, 04:40 PM
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How much do these tires cost and where do I sign up? I'm getting tired of replacing PS2s every 25,000 miles. It's not economical, and I drive like a grandma to boot so it's overkill.
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Old 01-27-14, 11:08 PM
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Michelin in the best. Every single person whop sells tires knows it and after owning a few sets of the Pilot sport series tires I am AMAZED at the quality and performance of their tires. No surprise some this innovative would come from Michelin
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