What Are Snow Tires?
Snow tires, also known as winter tires, are specifically designed to provide better traction and handling in snowy, icy, and slushy road conditions. These tires are optimized to perform in cold temperatures and on slippery surfaces, offering improved grip and control, which enhances driving safety during winter months.
Winter tires are made with rubber that stays softer and more pliable in cold winter temperatures. Flexible rubber is one reason you get more traction on snow and ice. However, the softer rubber also wears down more quickly. Replace your snow tires if the deep grooves that work to expel snow and slush buildup are worn down. Come by one of our shops today and we can help you decide if it's time for a new set of snow tires.
At Hyde's Automotive we know that icy roads can be dangerous if you don't have the right snow tires. They are engineered for traction in ice and snow when the temperature drops below 45 degrees. Winter tires are able to leverage a combination of ribs, grooves, lugs, sipes, and studs.
The 5 Most Important Things To Know About Winter Snow Tires
Ribs
The edge of a snow tire has a chunky angled tread designed to move snow and ice away from the outer edge of the tire.
Grooves
Snow tires offer deep grooves to move snow away from the tire. Deep grooves trap snow into the void allowing for total contact between the tread and the road. The angle of the grooves allows the tire to eject snow from the grooves when the vehicle is in motion.
Lugs
Snow tires offer an aggressive tread in the center of the tire designed to remove snow and ice build-up. Winter tires pair more lugs with deeper grooves than an all-season tires. Sets of lugs and grooves make up a tread block. Each tread block has irregular, sharp edges that increase traction. This special design allows winter snow tires to cut through snow and ice.
Sipes
Winter tires feature-heavy siping. "Siping" is a small patterned slit on the lugs that creates extra edges for better road grip. For added traction, many tire shops offer custom siping to improve starting and stopping.
Studs
There are two types of winter snow tires, studded and non-studded. Studded tires are embedded with small metal studs that provide the best traction in tough winter conditions. In some states studded winter tires are illegal. As the name would suggest, non-studded snow tires do not have studs. Non-studded snow tires do not provide the same high level of traction offered by studded tires but still provide substantially more grip than an M+S all-weather tire. Non-studded winter tires are often paired with snow chains for extremely heavy snow and ice.
Call one of our locations today or stop by and let's chat about the winter snow tire that's right for your vehicle's needs.