Discount Tire is having a
Labor Day Tire Sale on select
Sets of 4 Tires from Goodyear, Pirelli, Cooper, Yokohama, Bridgestone & More when you sign in to your Discount Tire account (
join for free). Select your installation option/location in cart.
Thanks Deal Hunter
Rokket for sharing this deal
Note: Must sign in to or create your free account to see the specific tire offers available to you. Includes select tires/wheels from the following brands (click the brand logo on the promo page to see specific tires):
Available Deals:
- Pirelli
- $110 instant savings on a set of Pirelli tires. (Excludes Pirelli Strada tires.)
- $80 manufacturer rebate by mail on select Pirelli tires
- Goodyear
- $110 instant savings on any set of Goodyear tires
- Up to $100 manufacturer rebate by mail on select sets of tires
- Cooper
- $110 instant savings on any set of Cooper tires
- Yokohama
- $110 instant savings on any set of Yokohama tires
- Bridgestone
- $110 instant savings on a set of Bridgestone tires.*(Excludes Blizzak tires.)
- Toyo
- $110 instant savings on a set of Toyo Open Country M/T, R/T, R/T Trail or AT3 tires
- Firestone
- $110 instant savings on a set of Firestone Destination tires.
- Voxx G-FX
- $80 instant savings on a set of wheels
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You really have to be conscious about the type of conditions you're normally driving in.
What my research has shown is that most name brand tires still vary, but they don't perform horrible in any one category. Whereas the the budgets may and often do.
I urge you to do a bit more research just to make sure those tires perform well in the elements you drive in.
Check out consumer reports, Tyre reviews.com (European, but really great information) and just watch some reviews on Google. Get some more data points.
I was horrified to learn that some tires work great on dry, but are just outright terrible on wet roads. This could very well put you and your passengers at risk.
I would consider myself very frugal, and I would agree there are a lot of premium tires out there that are very much hype or provide very marginal differences. But just be careful. These tires are your only connection between the vehicle and the road. Just want you to be safe and save money
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$202.03/ea Qty: 4, Price: $808.12 and after discounts the price is: $517.36
Looks like they counted the $110 discount twice.https://ibb.co/DrB2Y21
Must be a webpage or checkout setup mistake. Wonder if they would honor the price if I complete the purchase?
What an amazing deal!
What is the total for 4 tires? Hopefully, it ships
MN can be brutally cold all winter long. Biggest decision will be studded vs studless. Studs are metal spikes embedded in the tread. If you have ice on the roads for good lengths of time, go studded. If in mountainous terrain, studded. Otherwise studless are good enough.
Bridgestone, Continental, Michelin, and Goodyear all have good winters. Nokian test better but are harder to find and more expensive. Lesser names can do fine when studded, as the studs do more work than the tread on ice, while snow traction shows less critical differences across brands.
I'm in CO and have had 6 different snows over the years. I settled on studless Bridgestone Blizzaks. Generally better test results than all but Nokian, easy to find, and very easy to sell used given their widely known name.
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I live in northern Wisconsin so I know the snow and ice conditions you're talking about. My suggestion for tires is to get feedback from people that live around you because they know the roads and weather best. Winter driving in WI/MN are very different (worse) than iowa or Illinois even though we're only one state apart. I got blizzak ws80 winter tires for my wife and she hasn't been happier. Her car with winter tires and fwd drives much better than my awd with new all weather tires during snow and ice conditions. Good luck
It's great to hear from another minivan driver that has noticed a difference. Thank you!
Bridgestone, Continental, Michelin, and Goodyear all have good winters. Nokian test better but are harder to find and more expensive. Lesser names can do fine when studded, as the studs do more work than the tread on ice, while snow traction shows less critical differences across brands.
I'm in CO and have had 6 different snows over the years. I settled on studless Bridgestone Blizzaks. Generally better test results than all but Nokian, easy to find, and very easy to sell used given their widely known name.
This is extremely helpful. Thanks for taking the time to weigh in. I had never thought about buying used. Would you ever consider that? Just craigslist?
Perfect. That makes another recommendation for blizzak. Blizzak it is! Too bad they are excluded from the sale
I have bought used several times. The Continental VikingContacts on one car in the stable were used at 9/32", I wanted to try them specifically. Key for snows is tread depth. Street tires are good to 3/32", snows should be done at 5/32" or so, as depth is critical to holding snow for snow-to-snow friction. Also with Blizzaks uniquely, their special compound is only the first 55% of depth. Which is 6/32" of a WS90's 11/32" (ie, compound is done at 5/32").
CL, FB Marketplace yes. I've bought and sold both mounted and unmounted sets. My main commuting car (Mazda 3) has a sensor-less TPMS system which makes swapping tires especially simple.
One of many test reports: https://youtu.be/7gBW-pXkMOk?si=MN_5J
Trying to stack savings on top of Manufacturer warranty rebate for my current set of prematurely worn tires. I did find out that the price match feature can be stacked with the warranty. Any advice or experience is appreciated.
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