Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expirednottrollin posted Mar 30, 2021 06:35 PM
expirednottrollin posted Mar 30, 2021 06:35 PM

Pirelli PZero All Season Ultra High Performance Radial Tires (235/45R18 94V)

after $70 Rebate

4 for $339.30

$636

Amazon
234 Comments 102,665 Views
Visit Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Amazon has Pirelli PZero All Season Ultra High Performance Radial Tires (235/45R18 94V) on sale at 4 for $339.32 after $70 Rebate (via Visa Prepaid Card) when you follow the instructions below. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member nottrollin for finding this deal.

Instructions:
  1. On product page, change quantity to 4 and add to cart.
  2. Total will be 4 x $102.33 = $409.32.
  3. Proceed to checkout and complete your order.
Instructions for $70 Rebate:
  • Online:
    1. After your order ships, enter your name and email address here.
    2. Check your email inbox for an email with subject "Pirelli Online Rebate – Complete your Registration".
    3. Open the email and click "Confirm Email Address".
    4. You will be taken to a link to create an account; create a password.
    5. Fill out the rebate form.
      • Amazon is not listed on the Dealer list; check the "Can't find your Dealer?" box and enter Amazon manually.
      • In section 05, "Invoice Information", click "Upload your file" and upload your Shipping Confirmation Email and an invoice from the installation of the tires as proof of purchase.
    6. When you have filled out the form completely, click "Confirm Registration".
  • Mail-in:
    1. After your order ships, fill out the Mail-in Rebate Form
      • If you have problems downloading from the above link, click here to download from Pirelli's website.
      • Click "Download Rebate Form".
    2. Print out a copy of your Shipping Confirmation Email for your order and an invoice from the installation of the tires.
    3. Mail your completed rebate form with your Shipping Confirmation Email and an invoice from the installation of the tires as proof of purchase to the following address:
      • Pirelli $70 Spring Rebate C/O
      • Channel Fusion
      • P.O. Box 10557
      • Cedar Rapids, IA. 52410-0557
  • Allow 8-10 weeks after rebate submission for delivery of your prepaid Visa card.

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Offer ends April 4, 2021. Requests must be postmarked or submitted online by May 4, 2021.
    • Allow eight to ten weeks after online submission or mailing for delivery of your Card. Limit one offer per online submission or mailed envelope and two offers per name/household/address.
    • See full Terms & Conditions here.
  • About this store:
  • Please refer to the forum thread for additional details & discussion. -StrawMan86

Original Post

Written by nottrollin
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has Pirelli PZero All Season Ultra High Performance Radial Tires (235/45R18 94V) on sale at 4 for $339.32 after $70 Rebate (via Visa Prepaid Card) when you follow the instructions below. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member nottrollin for finding this deal.

Instructions:
  1. On product page, change quantity to 4 and add to cart.
  2. Total will be 4 x $102.33 = $409.32.
  3. Proceed to checkout and complete your order.
Instructions for $70 Rebate:
  • Online:
    1. After your order ships, enter your name and email address here.
    2. Check your email inbox for an email with subject "Pirelli Online Rebate – Complete your Registration".
    3. Open the email and click "Confirm Email Address".
    4. You will be taken to a link to create an account; create a password.
    5. Fill out the rebate form.
      • Amazon is not listed on the Dealer list; check the "Can't find your Dealer?" box and enter Amazon manually.
      • In section 05, "Invoice Information", click "Upload your file" and upload your Shipping Confirmation Email and an invoice from the installation of the tires as proof of purchase.
    6. When you have filled out the form completely, click "Confirm Registration".
  • Mail-in:
    1. After your order ships, fill out the Mail-in Rebate Form
      • If you have problems downloading from the above link, click here to download from Pirelli's website.
      • Click "Download Rebate Form".
    2. Print out a copy of your Shipping Confirmation Email for your order and an invoice from the installation of the tires.
    3. Mail your completed rebate form with your Shipping Confirmation Email and an invoice from the installation of the tires as proof of purchase to the following address:
      • Pirelli $70 Spring Rebate C/O
      • Channel Fusion
      • P.O. Box 10557
      • Cedar Rapids, IA. 52410-0557
  • Allow 8-10 weeks after rebate submission for delivery of your prepaid Visa card.

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Offer ends April 4, 2021. Requests must be postmarked or submitted online by May 4, 2021.
    • Allow eight to ten weeks after online submission or mailing for delivery of your Card. Limit one offer per online submission or mailed envelope and two offers per name/household/address.
    • See full Terms & Conditions here.
  • About this store:
  • Please refer to the forum thread for additional details & discussion. -StrawMan86

Original Post

Written by nottrollin

Community Voting

Deal Score
+78
Good Deal
Visit Amazon

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

annihil8ted
39 Posts
22 Reputation
Generally speaking, you want the tires to reach 150% of total weight.

4 times load 94 = 1477lbs is 5908 lbs
150% of 4250 is 6375lbs. '

So you're about almost 500lbs short and that's empty weight on the model 3. With a full load, you are going to go way past that and a full load can add up close to 800 - 1000lbs (adults + clothes + whatever else is in the car). I wouldn't do it.

You can also look at it this way: assume one tire pops.

3 times load 94 = 1477lbs is 4431

That's only a difference of 180. Almost the weight of an adult (read driver). You're at max load already and you can risk popping the other tires too.

I wouldn't do it. Being close to max load also increases wear too.
sufo.exe
187 Posts
108 Reputation
This 150% is BS, the oem tire for the 19" Model 3 is Continental ProContact RX 235/40R1996W XL T0 Tesla, ContiSilent with a load rating of 1,565 multiply by 4 and its 6,264 which is still under your recommended 6,375 limit. So an OEM tire is already under your spec and I don't see hundreds of Tesla blowup their tire all over the internet. Weight and speed ratings are just that manufacture already build in some buffer for idiotic people.

To make sure this isn't a one time fluke I looked up a similar sedan from one of the most conservative and reliable manufacture the Lexus IS350 F sport gross weight is 3,195 * 1.5 = 5,872.5
OEM tires are Bridgestone Turanza ER33 front tire with the max load of 1,235 back tire has max load of 1,323, using the larger number 1323 x 4 = 5,292 way under your recommendation.

Another bullet point, another post mention his sonata 2020 comes with the tire, so I checked and confirm it does indeed
Weight is 4,354 * 1.5 = 6534 so 5,908 is still under

Another member mention it came on his 2021 Kia K5 AWD GT-Line with a gross weight of 4354 (heavier then the Tesla Model 3) by your math they need tire weight rating of 6,534.
nottrollin
11582 Posts
11729 Reputation
Heads up for the Tesla owners: While this tire may fit, the Load and Speed Ratings MIGHT not match YOUR model. Please do your reseach, to be safe and to avoid possible installer issues.

233 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Pro
Mar 31, 2021 04:41 PM
2,154 Posts
Joined Jan 2006
susko
Pro
Mar 31, 2021 04:41 PM
2,154 Posts
Quote from slkmaster2000 :
But even at lower load ratings I'm sure tire manufacturers built in a buffer to keep up with those variable loads.
I'm sure the manufacture built in a buffer

Lol

Maybe. Do u have a family?
1
Mar 31, 2021 04:53 PM
187 Posts
Joined May 2009
sufo.exeMar 31, 2021 04:53 PM
187 Posts
Quote from daiei27 :
Weight distribution is one reason I can think of. I'm not talking about when it's parked on level ground.

When you turn at speed, do you think all four tires are still carrying equal loads? How about sitting on a hill? How about turning on a hill?

Most of that load can move onto two tires pretty easily.
According to this article the force experienced by a Porsche 911 Turbo, one of the hardest cornering car is 5000N convert that to lbs and its 1124lbs. So unless you are incline to take all season tire tire to the race track, fully loaded the car and take corners better then a 911 Turbo it won't matter. I don't even think race tracks will let you on with non performance tires, well maintained tires for liability reasons.

The steepest hill by a fair margin is in Hawaii at 45 degree the next one is 37%, the city don't let you park on those hills for safety reasons. At the maximum angle 45 you will only transfer a maximum of 1.41 (divide one set by 1.41 and multiple the other set by 1.41). Additionally that's static load which is totally different than moving load which are what the wheels are rated for.

I'm pretty sure the manufacture account for all possible reasonable usage condition when they give the load rating otherwise they would have listed them as separate line item. As before if you want to do extreme things with your car why are you getting $110 tires.
1
Mar 31, 2021 04:53 PM
8,941 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
dealgateMar 31, 2021 04:53 PM
8,941 Posts
Quote from haroldminer :
Registration is significantly higher in CA for this reason.
Oh - Good! Hopefully this will catch on in other states. It should be like $1100 extra per year for Tesla owners based on average mileage. 62% of CA's gas price is taxes and that portion should be added to to the annual registration fees.
3
Mar 31, 2021 04:56 PM
9,246 Posts
Joined Jul 2011
K7S5AMar 31, 2021 04:56 PM
9,246 Posts
Quote from dealgate :
Oh - Good! Hopefully this will catch on in other states. It should be like $1100 extra per year for Tesla owners based on average mileage. 62% of CA's gas price is taxes and that portion should be added to to the annual registration fees.
Enough people are leaving CA and you want to give them more reasons?
2
Mar 31, 2021 04:56 PM
3,156 Posts
Joined Jun 2016
np1050Mar 31, 2021 04:56 PM
3,156 Posts
Quote from susko :
I'm sure the manufacture built in a buffer

Lol

Maybe. Do u have a family?
Yes I do.

Otherwise the tire should be sold as, yes it will fit and support the weight, but don't intend on moving the car. Makes no sense

For example what if you built your own car in your garage or a go kart? Telling me you have to overshoot load ratings by a certain amount to account for regular driving characteristics the average person knows little about?
Anyway rant over. Very little information I found about load ratings other than meet or exceed factory specs. Not that useful
Mar 31, 2021 05:00 PM
1,750 Posts
Joined Feb 2021
FuschiaScene411Mar 31, 2021 05:00 PM
1,750 Posts
Quote from BrokePanda :
Well this fit my 2021 Toyota Prius prime?
Why are you putting these on your turd Prime?
3
Mar 31, 2021 05:01 PM
187 Posts
Joined May 2009
sufo.exeMar 31, 2021 05:01 PM
187 Posts
Quote from susko :
I'm sure the manufacture built in a buffer

Lol

Maybe. Do u have a family?
When they run out of logical argument they go for emotional one.

It doesn't matter, the original argument was will it safely work on a tesla model 3, the answer is yes. Now if you want to spend money buying better tire for your own purpose be my guest I don't care.

I'm only rejecting the original declaration that you need 150% of weight rating. Show me the contrary and stop using straw-men argument. If your arguments are true then base on my previous post all these manufacture are wrong and you should consult for them you would make a lot of money

https://slickdeals.net/forums/showpost.php?p=146352497&postcount=28

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 31, 2021 05:04 PM
2,947 Posts
Joined Mar 2009
AnankeMar 31, 2021 05:04 PM
2,947 Posts
Quote from slkmaster2000 :
That makes a little more sense. I'm not claiming to be a car expert or know the physics of a tire at load.
But even at lower load ratings I'm sure tire manufacturers built in a buffer to keep up with those variable loads. They can't reasonably assume that the car will stand still forever. Otherwise the load rating has no real meaning to the average consumer
I have some doubts about "tire manufacturer built in a buffer" Smilie Smilie
Pirelli is Chinese owned for several years already. A lot of its business practices and supply chains has changed since.
Mar 31, 2021 05:08 PM
252 Posts
Joined Feb 2006
GalactusMar 31, 2021 05:08 PM
252 Posts
Pity they don't come in P365/35R 21.5 for my Veyron
1
Mar 31, 2021 05:08 PM
187 Posts
Joined May 2009
sufo.exeMar 31, 2021 05:08 PM
187 Posts
Quote from slkmaster2000 :
Yes I do.

Otherwise the tire should be sold as, yes it will fit and support the weight, but don't intend on moving the car. Makes no sense

For example what if you built your own car in your garage or a go kart? Telling me you have to overshoot load ratings by a certain amount to account for regular driving characteristics the average person knows little about?
Anyway rant over. Very little information I found about load ratings other than meet or exceed factory specs. Not that useful
Exactly the average person is stupid, manufacture build in safety buffer for liability reasons you want to see tires that exceed their manufacture rating daily go to /r/justrollintotheshop

These are like random rule of thumbs from the days past that somehow sprouted as facts in modern day environment, like changing your oil every 3000 miles.
Mar 31, 2021 05:09 PM
3,569 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
ZeloMar 31, 2021 05:09 PM
3,569 Posts
Speaking of tires, any suggestions for mid-range 195/65R15 that are great in rain?

Ideally from CostCo, Les Schwab or Discount Tire Direct for around $350 installed.
Mar 31, 2021 05:11 PM
8,941 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
dealgateMar 31, 2021 05:11 PM
8,941 Posts
Quote from K7S5A :
Enough people are leaving CA and you want to give them more reasons?
Ha ha good point and Tesla owners are not the ones you want leaving anyway. But if all states did the road use tax it would be a 0 gain for leaving.
1
Mar 31, 2021 05:13 PM
1,237 Posts
Joined Feb 2013
DemiurgeMar 31, 2021 05:13 PM
1,237 Posts
Never the size I need
Mar 31, 2021 05:14 PM
43 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
kittaneMar 31, 2021 05:14 PM
43 Posts
Quote from notaxstate :
I was about to ask. Model 3 is heavy car. I guess will pass. Most installers won't even install if load rating doesn't match to spec.

Performance acceleration eats into tires quick.
Also, doesn't Tesla M3 require run flats? My experience w/ the Pirelli tires I bought for my BMW on Amazon had bubbles before the 1 year warranty expired. I called Pirelli direct and they said Amazon is not an authorized retailer and had to replace 2 of the 4 tires that I bought!
Last edited by kittane March 31, 2021 at 11:18 AM.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 31, 2021 05:17 PM
4,233 Posts
Joined Oct 2011
turbodogMar 31, 2021 05:17 PM
4,233 Posts
Guess what each of my four children are getting this Christmas?

Brand new tire swings!
Last edited by turbodog March 31, 2021 at 11:29 AM.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals