ESTRUCK
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Paul
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2019
- Threads
- 12
- Messages
- 234
- Reaction score
- 180
- Location
- New Jersey
- Vehicles
- Bolt EV-Kona EV+IONIQ 5 N - Deposits LUCID GRAVITY & BLAZER SS EV
- Thread starter
- #1
I have a separate set of winter wheels/tires for all my vehicles I intend on driving during the winter for the last 15 years. Plan on the same for the Rivian, but so far there haven't been any economical options for rims that I've seen. I might just end up having the meats swapped out for this first winter if there doesn't end up being a good solution to the problem. It's just a bummer that we're not allowed to use studded tires in Michigan when the roads aren't completely covered, as the Nokian options are studded.I’m wildly impressed with the twennie twens, range, overall handling, etc. No harshness whatsoever either. It could also just be the R1T but the sneakers are critical for any rig let alone a 7100’ rocket.
Note others point out the limited C&D test and the optimal temps for the test on the 22’s vs 20’s comparison.
Still concerned about snow handling and not sure if I’ll switch out to Hankook’s rubber or trade for the 20’s.
I would confidently rely on getting 290 as a baseline before adjusting for things like cold and elevation gain. If I tuck behind a large truck doing 65-70, I think I could get 325 easily, maybe more. The other thing I'd add is you can confidently rely on the range estimate the vehicle gives you. The ending range prediction in NAV will typically be slightly conservative if anything (lower than you'll actually arrive with). I've never been caught off guard by the vehicle's prediction of range.What kind of range are people actually seeing with conserve mode and the 20's ?
Nokian’s updated EV offerings look impressive, including Hakka’s in studless 22’s for R1. Weight class is slightly under spec but looks good.I have a separate set of winter wheels/tires for all my vehicles I intend on driving during the winter for the last 15 years. Plan on the same for the Rivian, but so far there haven't been any economical options for rims that I've seen. I might just end up having the meats swapped out for this first winter if there doesn't end up being a good solution to the problem. It's just a bummer that we're not allowed to use studded tires in Michigan when the roads aren't completely covered, as the Nokian options are studded.
Interesting. I can't find that R5 tire anywhere. I'm going to reach out to Nokian about it since it's basically the exact tire I'd want.Nokian’s updated EV offerings look impressive, including Hakka’s in studless 22’s for R1. Weight class is slightly under spec but looks good.
https://www.nokiantires.com/tires/electric-cars/
+1 hard to justify $1,300 to $1,600 per corner for forged winter wheel set.
simply go to canada. Kal Tire lists them.Interesting. I can't find that R5 tire anywhere. I'm going to reach out to Nokian about it since it's basically the exact tire I'd want.
100% agree with your conclusions.I'm skeptical when someone doing testing makes comments like this, which suggests they aren't as educated as they should be:
If anything, we would have thought the 85-degree temperature during this most recent test would hurt the range versus the 57-degree day for the earlier run.
They have this backwards, the higher temps with the 22's helped the results. I was immediately skeptical of the 30% difference as was sure there was an explanation. When I saw that they did the 20's in November and the 22's in the summer, I was pretty sure I knew the answer. Sure enough, yes, a 30 degree difference in temps explains a meaningful amount of that, tires alone don't make a 30% difference.
I thought the same thing.I'm skeptical when someone doing testing makes comments like this, which suggests they aren't as educated as they should be:
If anything, we would have thought the 85-degree temperature during this most recent test would hurt the range versus the 57-degree day for the earlier run.
This latest R1T was also 137 pounds lighter, at 7036 pounds total.
Difference could just be the wheel/tire combo, and maybe one didn't have a spare tire.Also, what is the reason for this difference?
Wheels/tires themselves, or one had a spare. I could definitely see the 20's being about 35lbs heavier per wheel than the 22's (total weight of wheel/tire).I thought the same thing.
Also, what is the reason for this difference?