01-16-2021, 08:38 AM | #1 |
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G8X in cold weather climates - how to option/configure?
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Let's say you are going to buy the G8X M3/4 and drive it somewhere with a legit winter (USA New England or midwest, Canada, Northern EU, etc), how are you configuring it to handle that? -Transmission (MT or Auto) -Drive (RWD vs AWD) -Stock wheel and tire choice -Winter wheel and tire plan -other weather tactics |
01-16-2021, 10:30 AM | #2 |
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I live in Michigan.
MT RWD Thought about getting the base wheel, selling the stock tires, and putting on with snows, but will probably get the upgraded wheel and then buy at minimum a set of snows to swap. Other stuff, maybe a shovel and a little weight in the trunk (sand can be used as traction if get stuck). Drive and enjoy! |
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01-16-2021, 10:39 AM | #3 |
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I'm also interested in opinions on this. My intent with the car would be a 3.5 season driver (so don't drive in a snowstorm or when the roads are slushy). What I really want is RWD and 6MT...what I really need is AWD (with auto unfortunately). It's just too hilly and snowy around me. My driveway is two-tiered uphill with a final slight ramp into the garage. For most of the winter its snow covered, and I'm just not sure even with snows RWD could handle it.
So wheels, has to be the base 18/19 combo for summer. For winter wheels, snow tires obviously. Hoping I can use the square stock 19 winter wheels (style 691 7.5x19, obviously different snow tires) from my M40i (I suspect the winter recommendation from BMW will be a square 19in setup). Anyone know the bolt pattern/center bore of the G80? No other winter tactics really. Can use our truck when the roads are bad. |
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01-16-2021, 11:02 AM | #4 |
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Rwd+6mt would be my ticket. I've lived in NH, MA, NY, CT and have been through more blizzards in Canada than I can count, all in an M car with winter tires.
For snows I've always used a set of dedicated tires and wheels so they are more narrow than stock. Within a few months of release, Bimmerworld, Apex and other companies will release compatible wheels for the G8X Personally I like smaller diameter tires for winter so there's more sidewall to absorb the crazy potholes we get in winter. Remember inside the realm of 'winter tires' you have high performance ones like the PA4 or Alpin5 and then a different category of full winter tires like the xice series. The xice ones are significantly stickier than the high performance ones The G80 likely has the new center bore 66.6 or whatever it is in the G series BMWs |
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01-16-2021, 11:04 AM | #5 | |
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The biggest thing will definitely be getting a set of good winter tires...NOT all-season. Try to go a bit narrower than stock if you anticipate driving though a lot of fresh, unpaved snow. If you don't think you'll be driving though a lot of snow, just a lot of extremely cold/dry days, IMO the stock tire size is fine. Although a lot of this will also be dictated by the wheels you pick (I would also get a set of dedicated winter wheels) and their corresponding tire size. Beyond that, a lot of it just comes down to common sense and safe driving.
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01-16-2021, 03:27 PM | #6 |
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I currently have an F90 M5 (obviously 4WD) with the 20" stock wheels/tires for summer (275 width fronts and 285 width rears). Michelin Pilot sport 4S.
I switch out the tires for winter tires of identical size every November-March. Pirelli Sotozero. I live in a Lake Erie snowbelt region with flat terrain. Never have any problems in deep snow. However, I plan to go with G80 6MT RWD for my next car. 19/20 wheel combination. Switch out the summers for winter tires, identical size for winter. Very flat terrain here so I'll just take it easy in snowstorms, keep it in MDM for a little slip, and the engine in comfort mode.
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01-16-2021, 03:53 PM | #7 |
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I have 3 M cars but one is a garage queen and the other two are track cars. I really miss daily driving an M in winter, it is so fun!
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01-16-2021, 04:44 PM | #8 | |
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-Drive (RWD vs AWD) = I drive F80 in Toronto with Blizzaks and during a snow storm, if I lose momentum going up even small hills (say, 10% incline), I will get stuck. AWD is definitely better for driving on snow/ice and I would get that on G8x if snow/ice traction is a concern. -Stock wheel and tire choice = Not clear what you mean but stock summer or all-season tires won't do for M3/4 in winter; you need snow tires for "legit" winters like in Minnesota, Buffalo or most of Canada. -Winter wheel and tire plan = I kept the same staggered setup as my summer tires but with minus sizing (-1, one size down), though a square setup is probably better. -other weather tactics = (1) I hear heavy sandbags (> 100lbs) in trunk improves RWD traction. (2) when driving in a snow or ice storm, do best to anticipate ahead and not lose momentum. |
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01-17-2021, 09:25 AM | #9 |
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MT RWD I had an m2 same config. It performed better than half the AWD cars around me in winter. Get a full set of non staggered winter tires and do a swap or rim and tire in the winter. Otherwise you risk damaging and the tires will be the same price as a whole set of rims and tires.
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01-17-2021, 10:28 AM | #10 |
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The people who say their RWD M3s are fine in snow with snow tires clearly don't live where they have to navigate any real hills. As posted above, you'll get stuck on even slight hills. I had that happen in my E92 M3 on snows and decided I'm done with RWD. It's AWD with snow tires all the way for me.
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01-19-2021, 09:55 PM | #11 |
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I'm holding out for the AWDs to better deal with the very hilly area and snow where I live in the northeast. Will be a ZCP so MT won't be an option anyway. Even with the AWDs, will get a set of snow tires as close to the stock size but on winter rims. I used to run Blizzaks in my 335is and they were amazing. On my F82 now I have a set of all-seasons and they give me almost no confidence in the snow. Especially on a hill.
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01-21-2021, 08:33 AM | #12 | |
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I (and my wife) daily drove a C63 with blizzaks in the winter and going uphill in stop-go-stop Toronto traffic was always a nail biter. Traction control had to be off to get the car moving upwards. |
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01-21-2021, 09:56 AM | #13 |
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I do appreciate posts like this. I'd been trying to talk myself into a RWD M3 being ok for where I live. It's clearly not unless I only want to drive it 9 months a year. I should post a picture of my driveway right now! It's plowed but is basically snow covered for 3 months every year. My M40i handles it just like dry pavement with no drama.
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01-21-2021, 03:12 PM | #14 |
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I daily my M6 in winters, no problems thus far
Pirelli Wintersottos + VERY light on throttle and brakes, avoid stopping/parking on steep roads Despite the lack of issues so far, I still sweat profusedly driving under heavy snow/ice conditions |
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01-21-2021, 04:27 PM | #15 | |
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My biggest concern with the M3 is it's low to the ground, so a block of ice taking out the oil pan or something else is a significant risk. Even marginally decent all season tires can handle deep snow. The concern with winter driving is always ice. While AWD can provide better traction for accelerating on ice, just avoid those situations, especially when combined with hills. |
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01-24-2021, 09:10 AM | #17 |
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I'm not an expert on tires so apologies if this is a dumb question:
Are there all-season tires that are better than the stock performance tires that come with the G80? Or am I effectively neutering the car simply by going with all-seasons, regardless of which tire I go with? My two options that I'm considering are: 1) Getting a dedicated winter tire and an extra set of high performance summer tires (and saving the stock tires for when I have to return my lease). I'd be looking at ~$2,500+ on tires. 2) Getting high performance all-seasons and not have to worry about changing out the tires twice a year or getting caught in some unpredictable snow storm in late April with summers on. Just one set of tires ~$1,200.
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01-24-2021, 09:49 AM | #18 | |
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If you drive aggressively in warm months, you probably would regret the AS tires. If you drive in snow/ice in winter you probably would regret the AS tires. They are good for someone who wants a single tire option and doesn't expect best performance in any specific condition. They do many things well but never best per season. |
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01-24-2021, 11:48 AM | #19 | |
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I do like to drive aggressively, although opportunities are limited living in Chicagoland. As for winter driving, I don't really need high performance as much as just being able to get by, so all-seasons would be totally fine for me in the winters. It's really the summer performance I'm questioning. Will going to highly rated all-season tires reduce summer performance to such a noticeable amount compared to the stock summer tires that it justifies me spending significantly more money for 2 sets of tires as opposed to just 1 set of tires?
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01-24-2021, 02:18 PM | #20 | ||
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01-24-2021, 03:01 PM | #21 | |
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My recommendation is a summer set with a good all-season tire and a dedicated winter set. On a 500 HP RWD car in the summer, even performance summer tires will break traction. One way to think about this is there are going to be a few weeks or even months where conditions are too warm for winter tires resulting in their heavy wear and even worse traction than all-season tires. A worn winter tire will be less effective next time it encounters snow. Or it can be too cold for summer tires resulting in scary situations. Chicago is perfect for all-seasons tires. While some like a PS4s can be good in the rain, once it's below 50F and wet, an all-season will perform much better. A lot of standing water? The all-season tire's typically deeper groves and tread can be a life-safer. There are "all-season" and "all-weather" tires - the former is biased for summer performance and the other is biased for winter performance with snow traction. The two leaders for all-season performance tires are the Michelin A/S 3+ and the Continental DWS 06. Within those two options, the Michelin is biased for summer performance and the Continental is biased for wet/snow performance. I've had the DWS 06 and it was wonderful. I've driven it on a 535 with xDrive in heavy snow without any problems.
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01-24-2021, 03:19 PM | #22 | ||
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