Sponsored

20" Inch 20" Michelin Defender LTX M/S2

DayTripping

Well-Known Member
First Name
Timothy
Joined
Sep 12, 2024
Threads
13
Messages
1,544
Reaction score
2,133
Location
DFW
Vehicles
Gen1 R1T QM, S Plaid, Highland 3 Perf, 3 Long Range, R2 on order
Occupation
Consultant
Don’t forget, traction is directly related to breaking. One accident can obliterate thousands of kilowatt hours of savings to gain a few extra miles in range.

if I were hyper focused on efficiency, I wouldn’t be driving a Rivian in the first place. I get that some people are though.
Sponsored

 

Matt D.

Well-Known Member
First Name
Matt
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
315
Reaction score
763
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicles
Odyssey
Don’t forget, traction is directly related to breaking. One accident can obliterate thousands of kilowatt hours of savings to gain a few extra miles in range.

if I were hyper focused on efficiency, I wouldn’t be driving a Rivian in the first place. I get that some people are though.
Appreciate the concern ?. Though I don’t think that the Michelins are going to be too dangerous.
 

LL75

Well-Known Member
First Name
lance
Joined
Sep 21, 2022
Threads
44
Messages
1,756
Reaction score
1,282
Location
Dallas
Vehicles
R1S, R1T, Silverado, F150, RangeRover Evoque
Let’s pretend that I don’t care about traction and only efficiency. Which one has the edge?
The goodyear actually is not all season tires. It is AT according to Goodyear website. So, efficiency wise, the defender will be better. If you only care about efficiency, take a look at General grabber HTS60 tires or Pirelli AS+3.
 

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,082
Reaction score
1,632
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
The Goodyear's sure look cool, but the efficiency is some concern. More of a concern for me is the longevity/noise/ride which is why I'm going with the Michelin unless someone feels the Goodyear are equal in those respects
 

B Digs

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jun 14, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
365
Reaction score
423
Location
Cleveland, OH
Vehicles
R1T
Occupation
Tire Engineer
Clubs
 
No question the Michelin will be what you are looking for…
@ksurfier, I will question that statement.

I do not know the efficiency of the Michelin tire, but as an engineer at Goodyear that helped develop the Wrangler Territory AT, I can confirm designing an efficient tire was a top priority.

The Goodyear tire may not be the most efficient option, but it does have very good efficiency considering it's rugged looks, ride, handling, snow, wet and noise performance.

@LL75, Rivian classifies the Goodyear tire as an "All Season" option and the Goodyear does perform well in all seasons. In reality, it is tough to put a label on this tire due to it's versatility.

@jeeden, here are a couple good threads on the Goodyear tire if you would like more info...
https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...y-at-275-60-20-factory-at-tires-saving.37522/

https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...-tire-option-available-when.28764/post-558566
 

Sponsored

DayTripping

Well-Known Member
First Name
Timothy
Joined
Sep 12, 2024
Threads
13
Messages
1,544
Reaction score
2,133
Location
DFW
Vehicles
Gen1 R1T QM, S Plaid, Highland 3 Perf, 3 Long Range, R2 on order
Occupation
Consultant
The Goodyear's sure look cool, but the efficiency is some concern. More of a concern for me is the longevity/noise/ride which is why I'm going with the Michelin unless someone feels the Goodyear are equal in those respects
According to Rivian, the Goodyear's efficiency takes a slight hit versus their most efficient factory tire.

I now have spoken to 2 people that have them on Gen 2 that absolutely love them. They went through the torrential rains, with significant flooding in our area and were quite happy with them from all areas, efficiency, noise, wet/dry traction, etc. One of them was a previous Model Y owner and those vehicles are pretty quiet. He had no noise complaints.

No tire can do it all. So you need to prioritize what matters the most. If I want to hypermile for efficiency, I'll be driving my Model 3. I realize I am fortunate to have a few EV options to drive. Obviously I want good range even though I bought one of the least efficient EVs currently on the market, I put traction ahead of efficiency. These don't seem to punish your efficiency but have more of the other things that are more important to me.

It reminds me a bit of the Michelin Platinum defender without being such a heavy tire with all the extra plies. While looks aren't the most important thing to me, after seeing them on a Rivian in person, I am a fan. For curb appeal vs an very cool looking aggressive offroad tire, I'll give them an 8. For the Michelins, I'll give them a 4 (about the same as I'd rate the factory 21's). Those are my subjective ratings.
 

Matt D.

Well-Known Member
First Name
Matt
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
315
Reaction score
763
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicles
Odyssey
@ksurfier, I will question that statement.

I do not know the efficiency of the Michelin tire, but as an engineer at Goodyear that helped develop the Wrangler Territory AT, I can confirm designing an efficient tire was a top priority.

The Goodyear tire may not be the most efficient option, but it does have very good efficiency considering it's rugged looks, ride, handling, snow, wet and noise performance.

@LL75, Rivian classifies the Goodyear tire as an "All Season" option and the Goodyear does perform well in all seasons. In reality, it is tough to put a label on this tire due to it's versatility.

@jeeden, here are a couple good threads on the Goodyear tire if you would like more info...
https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...y-at-275-60-20-factory-at-tires-saving.37522/

https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/threads/new-goodyear-20”-tire-option-available-when.28764/post-558566
Thank you for your insights. Not trying to hypermile but really need something more efficient than the OEM 20” Pirellis (quieter would be a huge bonus). Thoughts on the Goodyears for a gen 1 QM R1S?
 

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,082
Reaction score
1,632
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
Thank you for your insights. Not trying to hypermile but really need something more efficient than the OEM 20” Pirellis (quieter would be a huge bonus). Thoughts on the Goodyears for a gen 1 QM R1S?
The goodyear look so cool.and they seem like a performance competitor to the Michelin but I'm afraid of my family after they have endured the noise of the pirelli's. I have 275/65/20s on mine too so imm probably go with the Michelins.. maybe I can get these on my r2!
 

B Digs

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jun 14, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
365
Reaction score
423
Location
Cleveland, OH
Vehicles
R1T
Occupation
Tire Engineer
Clubs
 
Hi @Matt D. and @jeeden, in looking at Rivian's online configurator estimates, the 20" AT option (275/65R20) is approximately 12% less efficient than the 22" options. The Goodyear tire shows ~4% less efficient than the 22" options which would calculate to 8% more efficient than the 20" AT option.

The noise performance was factored in to the Goodyear design and I have been happy with the tire noise levels on my R1T.
 

ksurfier

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ken
Joined
Aug 23, 2022
Threads
42
Messages
1,051
Reaction score
921
Location
CA
Vehicles
R1SQM, Tesla
Occupation
Fake Science Lead
Clubs
 
@ksurfier, I will question that statement.

I do not know the efficiency of the Michelin tire, but as an engineer at Goodyear that helped develop the Wrangler Territory AT, I can confirm designing an efficient tire was a top priority.

The Goodyear tire may not be the most efficient option, but it does have very good efficiency considering it's rugged looks, ride, handling, snow, wet and noise performance.

@LL75, Rivian classifies the Goodyear tire as an "All Season" option and the Goodyear does perform well in all seasons. In reality, it is tough to put a label on this tire due to it's versatility.

@jeeden, here are a couple good threads on the Goodyear tire if you would like more info...
https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...y-at-275-60-20-factory-at-tires-saving.37522/

https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/threads/new-goodyear-20”-tire-option-available-when.28764/post-558566
The Michelin is at least 5% more efficient than the Goodyear, so Michelin is ~10% more efficient than the OEM Pirelli. Efficiency aside, the Michelin has a 70k warranty and the Goodyear does not have a warranty…like I said before, it’s not a fair comparison…
 

Sponsored

DayTripping

Well-Known Member
First Name
Timothy
Joined
Sep 12, 2024
Threads
13
Messages
1,544
Reaction score
2,133
Location
DFW
Vehicles
Gen1 R1T QM, S Plaid, Highland 3 Perf, 3 Long Range, R2 on order
Occupation
Consultant
I really doubt any tire will go 70,000 miles on a Rivian. There might be some person out there who can get it. But typically it will be alignment or something that takes a tire out sooner, which is not covered under any of the tire warranties. The reason the Goodyear doesn’t have a warranty anyway is because it’s an OEM tire.

If I get 30,000 good miles out of any tires on my Rivian, I will be a happy camper. At the end of the day, something had to be given up to get those 70K miles. You always have to compromise something to get something else. It really comes back to matching your priorities with the correct tire. A tire with an extremely high durometer rating, would probably last forever and be pretty efficient, but I wouldn’t want to be driving it aggressively or in the rain.
 

IHScout

Well-Known Member
First Name
Waid
Joined
Oct 2, 2020
Threads
8
Messages
274
Reaction score
593
Location
Phoenix, AZ
Vehicles
Chevrolet Volt, Expedition
I really doubt any tire will go 70,000 miles on a Rivian. There might be some person out there who can get it. But typically it will be alignment or something that takes a tire out sooner, which is not covered under any of the tire warranties. The reason the Goodyear doesn’t have a warranty anyway is because it’s an OEM tire.

If I get 30,000 good miles out of any tires on my Rivian, I will be a happy camper. At the end of the day, something had to be given up to get those 70K miles. You always have to compromise something to get something else. It really comes back to matching your priorities with the correct tire. A tire with an extremely high durometer rating, would probably last forever and be pretty efficient, but I wouldn’t want to be driving it aggressively or in the rain.
We have the Michelin 275/60/20 with almost 37k miles (3% adjusted) I don't think we will make it to 70k but we will definitely make it to 55k. I am very satisfied with the tire. We will probably go back to the 275/65/20 when these wear out because I think I taller tire looks nicer, but that is my preference.
 

lslick23

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2022
Threads
9
Messages
339
Reaction score
336
Location
South Florida
Vehicles
23 R1T DM
The Goodyears are very quiet and they’ve been a tad more efficient than the Pirelli 20. I’m just under a 1,000 miles And Goodyear at 2.38, pirelli 2.37 at 22k. I expect the Goodyears to improve even more in efficiency, but I do have some towing trips coming up which will skew it. Oh well the tires are awesome so no regrets.
 

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,082
Reaction score
1,632
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
I was able to order the Michelins at my local Costco yesterday with the new January Michelin rebate. They should be in next week.

They also volunteered that they just got the pucks in for the lift 3 weeks ago and are happy they don't need to ask the owners to bring their own pucks anymore.

Is about $1300 for all four after tax, disposal and includes their road hazard warranty of course.
 

Matt D.

Well-Known Member
First Name
Matt
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
315
Reaction score
763
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicles
Odyssey
Had to go with the Michelin 275/65/20 over the Goodyears. No one around here will put a tire on that’s smaller than the door sticker. They go on Saturday. I have a 2300 mile (round trip) in 2 months, fingers crossed on the efficiency.
Sponsored

 
 








Top