musher51
Been here awhile...
...I have never had a set of snow tires on a car. I have always used all-season tires on both rear and front wheel drive cars and never had a problem...I never felt that snow tires would help that much on ice and in really deep snow I just would avoid driving until roads were either packed down (usually what they do in Alaska) or wait for the plows to come out in other areas...With the fairly balanced front to rear weight distribution in the Genesis and stability control I imagine I would manage winter driving just fine without any snow tires...I would certainly give it a try before considering purchase of snow tires.
Hmmm, interesting perspective. I, too, have almost always lived in northern climates. Perhaps my perspective is unduly influenced by the fact that I previously drove BMWs with the sport pkg, so by default, my standard (summer) tires were high-performance, and thus TOTALLY unsuitable for driving in any sort of snow or slush. (I ventured out into 1" - 2" snows just two times with performance tires, and I was so relieved when those trips were over that I literally kissed the ground upon reaching my destination..virtually NO traction). And for the record, my BMWs had excellent traction control chips and a 50/50 front/rear ratio (plus a manual tranny), but I STILL wouldn't be caught dead on even a little snow with performance tires.
I've been thinking about running all year on all-season tires with the Genesis, but I'm skeptical about doing so with the stock Dunlop's that Hyundai chose to install on this car based on very low ratings for winter performance on tirerack.com.
So, it may be that I could avoid the expense and hassle of buying a second set of wheels/tires (including the added expense of enabling the TPM system on a second set) if I simply replace the Dunlops with a better set of all-weather M/S tires. But then I'd be stuck with a set of Dunlop Sport 5000Ms with <1K miles on them, too, which sounds like an ebay/craigslist kind of moment.
Food for thought, though...