Zoidz
Well-Known Member
Not calling out bad mad, just a faulty assumption that the tires will last as long as the manufacturer claims. I can't see any possibility that a 7,000+ lb Rivian is going to get your real-world adjusted tire life. I hope I'm wrong...Consumer reports has rated the Pirelli P4 Four Seasons Plus tire to have one of the longest tested treadwear at 100K.
The Pirelli P4 Four Seasons Plus has a treadwear rating of 760. Given that the treadwear rating is developed by the manufacturer using reference tires from the manufacturer, we can do some extrapolation here.
For the 500 treadwear rated 22's: = ~65K (500/760 x 100,000)
For the 600 treadwear rated 21's: = ~79K (600/760 x 100,000)
For the 640 treadwear rated 20's: = ~84K (640/760 x 100,000)
Now, all three tires here have different load ratings:
P4 4 Season 17: 1709
Pirelli 21/20: 2760
Pirelli 22: 2679
And that may also impact the treadwear even if, in theory, the tire should be constructed in a way that it should account for that (stronger sidewall). Added weight, may reduce overall treadwear.
Additional speed (the R1T is likely to burn tread at a higher rate given the acceleration) will also likely impact treadwear.
So, for the sake of argument, and to make the math easier, let's assume a 10% penalty for each (weight and acceleration).
That leads to the following predicted real-world tread life:
For the 500 treadwear rated 22's: ~65K (500/760 x 100,000) - 20% = ~53K
For the 600 treadwear rated 21's: ~79K (600/760 x 100,000) - 20% = ~63K
For the 640 treadwear rated 20's: ~84K (640/760 x 100,000) -20% = ~67K
For those averaging 12K miles per year, that would mean replacement of all 4 tires at a rate of:
22's = ~4.4 years
21's = ~5.25 years
20's = ~7 years
Somebody call out any bad math. Somebody who loves math. You know who you are!![]()
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