| Zanter |
| So I'm looking to invest in new tires for my aging Murano and I wanted to know what is the largest and best tires to put on this car? I don't want to put stock tires back on it and I was hoping to get something that doesn't require investing in new rims. If someone can point me in the right direction, that would be awesome! |
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| njjoe |
Zanter-
First question - Where do you live? In other words, is snow a factor?
-njjoe |
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| Zanter |
| I'm in the midwest, so we would normally get tons of snow in the winter. It's a full four seasons life here :) |
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| Eric L. |
Since snow is a factor, the recommendations would be either Michelin CrossTerrain in the stock size or Yokohama Geolandar G052's in 265/60/18. Both are very good all season tires. The Goodyear has a bias in comfort and ride quality (its S-rated to 112mph, lower than the stock Goodyear's T-rated 118mph). The Yokos have a bias in handling (H-rated to 130mph).
Its up to you, but try to stick to tried and true sizes, like either stock 235/65/18 or the slightly larger 265/60/18. 255/60/18 would be perfect, but there aren't many choices in that range that wouldn't be a compromise. |
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| nissanlove |
| if your goin all season, go with the yoko's. many say good things about them. a friend has the cross terrains on his mdx and he likes them in the winter also. |
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| njjoe |
Zanter-
As you are finding out, the selection of replacement tires for the Murano is very limited. Not too long ago even the OEM Goodyears were hard to come by. I am sure that as the MO population increases more tire manufacturers will see the market and provide us with alternatives to the OEM skins. Unfortunately that doesn't help you now.
-njjoe |
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| Zanter |
| So I guess my best bet is going with the Yokohama Geolandar HTS 265/60/18 right now. How much bigger are these from the stock tires? |
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| KSmurano |
This is a good tire calculator
http://www.miata.net/garage/tirecalc.html
GY vs Yoko's
Sidewall 6.0 6.3
Radius 15.0 15.3
Diam 30.0 30.5
Circum 94.3 95.9
Revs 672 661
With non-stock tire 1.5% too slow, when reading 60 going 61 mph |
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| Zanter |
| That is a very cool sizing tool!! |
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| Mr3Putt |
| Is the Murano the only car that uses 235/65/18 as it's standard tire? |
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| rtking |
You can just plug in this formula into Excel and it'll give you the diameter of the tire:
=((((235/25.4)*(65/100))*2)+18)
Basically:
235/25.4 = inches width of the tire. 235 mm is stock width
65/100 = 65% - or the aspect ratio of the tire
*2 = you have to add sidewall height twice to get total diameter
+18 = wheel diameter
If you plug this into excel (but replace 235, 65 and 18 with cell references), you can calculate all sorts of tire diameters. Then divide your new tire diamter by the original diameter to get the % variance (difference) in height. This will give you the % you will be "off" on the speedometer.
Bob |
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| njjoe |
quote: Originally posted by Mr3Putt
Is the Murano the only car that uses 235/65/18 as it's standard tire?
Yes.
-njjoe |
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| MightyMo |
| It's the % difference in circumferance that'll give you the speedo error, not diameter. |
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| Eric L. |
| Actually since diameter is directly proportional to circumference (pi*D), either number can used to estimate speedometer error. |
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| zebelkhan |
quote: Originally posted by Eric L.
Actually since diameter is directly proportional to circumference (pi*D), either number can used to estimate speedometer error.
Only if you are talking about the outside diameter, not inside.....:D |
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| Eric L. |
quote: Originally posted by zebelkhan
Only if you are talking about the outside diameter, not inside.....:D
Hehehe it will always be 18" on the inside. :D |
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| dborla01 |
| I have said it before and I still love my Toyo Proxes ST's. They don't have an overly aggressive tread pattern,( which would be best for off-road), but are for the highway and they handle nicely and gas mileage is not affected, that I have discerned. You will not go wrong with these tires. :4::4: Darrell. |
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| rtking |
quote: Originally posted by Eric L.
Hehehe it will always be 18" on the inside. :D
What, are you guys a bunch of comedians? :p
Eric is right... either calculation (diameter or circumference) will yield the same % error. The only difference is that you're introducing Pi (3.1415926) to the equation, but since Pi is a constant for calculation of both tire sizes, it can be left out of the equation and still yield the same % error result. (This, of course, excludes rounding errors of Pi.)
I actually like the looks of the Avon S/T in 265/60-18 size. I think that will be the next tire for my MO when the stock Eagle LS wears out.
Bob |
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| dmako |
While I don't have, I like the Toyo Proxes too. Any use in snow?
quote: Originally posted by dborla01
I have said it before and I still love my Toyo Proxes ST's. They don't have an overly aggressive tread pattern,( which would be best for off-road), but are for the highway and they handle nicely and gas mileage is not affected, that I have discerned. You will not go wrong with these tires. :4::4: Darrell.
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| droo |
quote: Originally posted by Mr3Putt
Is the Murano the only car that uses 235/65/18 as it's standard tire?
Not any more. It's now the standard tire size when you get 18" rims on the 2006 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer and Limited trim levels (they use the Michelin Cross Terrain).
http://www.fordvehicles.com/suvs/explorer/features/
Sharing this tire size with the best-selling SUV should help a bunch with availability and manufacturer options. |
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| ray |
I just put on new Michilen Cross Terrains in a 275 55 18. They look great and fit the rims just fine. They were also in stock at Americas Tire.
Ray |
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| nissanlove |
is there any rubbing with the 275's???
i'm thinking of maybe putting the toyos on in 275's |
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| ray |
No rubbing at all. I had 255/55/18 Pirellis on before and these do not appear to be wider (but I have not looked at the exact specs).
Ray |
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| gigadive |
So, in conclusion, I would like to know what kind of mileage Mo owner's are getting on their tires. I got 35,000 with the stock P235/65R18 Goodyear Eagle LSs.
Which tires get the most mileage for $150-200 a piece?
Who is getting more miles and with what tires? And with those tires, how is does it compare to the GY Eagles in terms of style and ride?
More tire "data" doesn't interest me; longivity, style, and ride does. What say you?:4: |
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