Exactly this... As someone who goes to Tahoe in the winter all the time to visit my Father, I went with the 22s just because the 21s you can't find tires for.20" or 22" wheels are clear winners for snow. Because you can buy real winter/snow tires in those sizes.
But if you aren't going to do real snow tires, would not expect much difference between the 21 and 22.
I live in Tahoe full time and always run actual winter tires from sometime in November until May or so.I'll be using my R1S in Northern California with a few trips to Tahoe each year. For the inevitable snow in Tahoe is there appreciable difference in the performance of their 22" tire vs the 21"?
I haven't compared either tire on an R1 in the snow. But previously I had a Volvo C40 and it's OEM tires are also the Pirelli Scorpion Zero All Season, same model as the Rivian 22" rims, just different sizes.Online it says the 21" road wheels have "improved handling in different weather conditions" but since they are both M+S rated I"m hoping both are the same on snow as I like the look of the 22's better.
From the support site https://rivian.com/support/article/what-type-of-tire-comes-with-each-wheel
- 21” Road wheels come with all-season tires for the best range and improved handling in different weather conditions, and are M+S rated
- 22” Sport wheels come with all-season performance tires for the best on-road handling and are M+S rated
And interestingly, Nokian only has exact fit winter tires for the 22" rims so far: https://www.nokiantires.com/rivian/20" or 22" wheels are clear winners for snow. Because you can buy real winter/snow tires in those sizes.
But if you aren't going to do real snow tires, would not expect much difference between the 21 and 22.
Are you planning on having a Rivian SC do the wheel swap so they can do whatever software changes they do when you change rims? Or just swap and let it be.I've ordered our R1S with the 21s, but plan to get a dedicated set of 20"snow tires and rims.
This is what I've done on our Model X since 2016- 20" a/s for most of the year, and 19" Blizzaks on TireRack rims for the winter. This setup has worked very well.
Also Snow tires tend to have a rubber compound that stays soft at lower temperatures, combined with sipes to maintain traction on snow and ice.I'll preface this with snow tires are best for winter traction. That being said, I believe the M+S rater all seasons are rated based as such based on the voids in the tire tread. I may be wrong there.
Yeah for getting into and out of the basin I think this is true.Over the past 20 years of driving to Tahoe, I only had winter tires on one season. They were great, otherwise I've used all seasons - several with the Pirelli Scorpion verde's on my Cayenne. What I've found is that if the road is SO BAD that you NEED dedicated winter tires, CalTrans usually has the road closed for visibility, avalanche control, spinouts, etc.
I'm just going to swap and accept the slight discrepancy in the speedometer and odometer.Are you planning on having a Rivian SC do the wheel swap so they can do whatever software changes they do when you change rims? Or just swap and let it be.
Hoping they make the wheel / tire size configurable before this winter, so I can also get a set of 20"s and put winter tires on them, then either do the swap myself or have a local shop do it.