Ours came with Dunlop Le Mans RV502, 215/70R 15 98Hs (same as Alison's, BTW) all round - hi-spec asymetric tread pattern, heavy duty reinforced sidewall, SUV tyres, used mainly for on road/occasional off road, 4x4 applications (ours is not a 4x4) in Oz and S Africa, as well as in Japan, but not available here.Hippotastic wrote:I put 195 on the front of mine, and the steering was much lighter and the handling for me was better. I have 215 on the back steel wheels 4WD.dandywarhol wrote:Got to go against the grain here and say that having driven both 195 front and 215 front, the 195s steered and tracked far better. The wider 215s "tramlined" too much for my liking!
I reckon they've got another 3-4k miles left on them before I'll need to swap them out, so it'll be in the winter and ideally I want to use hi-spec "all seasons" tyres, this time.
There's very few good choices though, even for just 215/70s in "all-seasons" road tyres, and I have concluded so far that the best choice in that fit would be Vredestein "Quatrac 2" 215/70R15 98S's. Unfortunately however, they don't do a 195/80R fit (195/80 is specified for the fronts on our cold weather spec Bongo, with speedo calibration based on 215/70s on the back, not 215/65s) but I would really also prefer to go "against the grain", using 195 fronts, as dandywarhol and Hippotastic have done.
If I therefore decided to go for 195/80s front and 215/70s rear, instead of the Vredesteins (it is still in the balance), I'll be looking for non-4x4, purely on-road tyres, with high load ratings, low road noise and good wet surface adhesion - i.e., not "chunky" tyres but reinforced MPV type road tyres. Lowest price is not important. Anybody got a view on which tyres might suit, and be likely to be available in both sizes? I haven't yet gone through their specs and sizes carefully but I fear that would push me up into Michelin/Pirelli territory which might be just a bit too expensive, in which case, it'll have to be Vredesteins*.
*(About £85 each fitted.)