I took the Clarity to America's Tire today for a second opinion. The guy used his little depth measuring tool and said the Honda dealer was wrong. He said all four tires are fine and guestimated I'd get another 10K miles on those tires. That should put us about mid 2019. I'm going to watch and wait.
From the tire rack test results- see image. They used a BMW 430. Our actual 60-0 is 129 ft. Perhaps a decrease from 130 to 100 ft maybe more realistic but the 30ft differential is probably valid.
Tread depth tools are inexpensive and easy to use. Maybe get one yourself? That way you can keep track of things yourself
That's right! You'll only get a few feet better stopping distance from 60 mph, not 30 feet. You'll definitely get better dry and wet traction going with summer tires though. Your range may decrease up to 20%. Funny you picked this tire. Motortrend tested the same tire on a Chevy Bolt and got 128 feet. https://www.motortrend.com/news/chevrolet-bolt-ev-summer-tires-review-electricity-meets-grip/
Funny Electra hah hah hah . I do keep longer distances than most but if everyone kept the full recommended distances between cars on NYC area highways traffic would lock up for days.
I stand corrected on the distance. Tire rack tested the OEM tire and 50-0 was 107 ft vs 83 ft so an improvement of 24 feet. Tests were not done on the same cars so best we can say is stopping distance has been improved.
I also had a small chunk of sidewall damaged and had to replace 1 tire. Is there a trend of the OEM Michelin sidewalls getting easily damaged? Has anyone researched what are good replacement tires for the clarity?
I hit a curb and tore a chunk of tire out of the sidewall. Had to have it replaced as well. Went to dealership and got the OEM tire. Costco had the same tire at the same price so I went with the dealership. $211.
Sidewalls of low profile tires like we have on the Clarity are much more easily damaged, regardless of brand. Here's some reading at the Tire Rack about the issue. I sure wish this vanity trend toward rubber band tires and huge wheels gets over with soon and we get back to tires that have some sidewall https://tires.tirerack.com/tires/Sidewall Damage For replacements, quite a few folks have posted on that. Run a couple of searches for tires on the forum and you'll have an evening's worth of reading.
When the originals wear out, you can switch from the OEM 235/45/18 to 215/50/17 tires. On some tires the 17" ones are $100 cheaper, the price of basic alloy rims. You gain a half inch of sidewall and a clarity that doesn't look like every other one!
Hello Clarity owners, I was advised by the dealership that my original tires were approaching the end of their useful life (45k km) and a visual inspection of the tread looks reasonable. Throw in a slow leak in one tire and it looks like I'm due for new tires. I agree with prior posts about the performance of the stock tires, it is good; but less than 45k km's is pretty short life for a tire. I don't drive agressively. Costco has the Bridgestone EP422 Plus as less expensive than the Michelin A/S, tirerack test (https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tests/testDisplay.jsp?ttid=121 ) seems to show that the Bridgestone is overall better with the Michelin giving you the best fuel efficiency but not always the best results. The Bridgestones are also $300 cheaper at Costco for a set of 4....which in a Clarity is a lot of kms to save that much in gas. I run Blizzaks on 17 inch rims in the winter (destroys my efficiency and they're loud, but they really grip and slice through heavy snow) so they'll just be used April to October up here in Quebec. Won't be buying them until Sept/Oct so if anyone has a strong opinion of the EP422 I'm listening. Thank you.
On the right is my stock tire, replaced at 43,000 miles with a bit of life left: This is what I replaced them with: Not energy efficient, but the price was certainly right. So far, so good. I can’t tell much of a difference in either noise or handling. This summer EV miles seem to be down from 48-50 to 42-44, but I don’t know how much of that is due to being almost 3 years old and how much might be the tires. I’ll have a better idea once I do my battery capacity test next week.
I'm looking at getting the Continental PureContacts from 4wheelonline. They might affect the range a bit but I want to have grippy tires that are less expensive than michelin.
My 2018 traction battery capacity turned out to have a measured drop of 55 aH to 46.62 aH after almost 3 years and 56,560 miles. That could easily account for most of the drop in EV miles I’ve seen, though it’s still possible the non-Energy Saving tires contribute a tiny bit to that drop.
I've only gone ~22000 miles and my OEM tires are apparently shot... the front two are almost bald (2/32?!?!) and the dealer refused to rotate them when I last took it in for maintenance... I've had them rotated each time I've had to take my car in so no clue why they are off so much. Was looking at some from Costco this month and hope they last a lot longer than the stock ones did because they were duds Anything wrong with that set?
Just turned over 22,000 miles on my 2018 Clarity and original set of tires still in good condition (6/32-7/32 tread depth). I have seen in the forums many complaints of very short life on the original EnergySaver tires. Can't help but wonder why the widely differing experiences. I can't imagine there would be that much inconsistency in the manufacturing nor that much difference in driving conditions to get such drastically different results.