Ultra High Performance vs. Max Performance Summer Tires

Ultra High Performance vs. Max Performance Summer Tires 2024 Test 3

Published July 22, 2024

Methodology

Our Testing Formula

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Custom Test Track

Located adjacent to our South Bend headquarters, our test track allows our team to discover how each tire will behave under the extremes of emergency situations on the road or the limits of performance in competition.

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Our fleet of test cars, an SUV, and a pickup truck are specially selected to give the best and most consistent results when testing tires.

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Post-Test Ratings

Each tire model is tested and independently scored 1-10 on comfort and performance. We are the only retailer performing in-house, independent tire tests.

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Test Result Video

Best Performance Tires: Ultra High Performance vs. Max Performance Summer Tires – 2024 Test 3

Length: (22:06)

Tires Tested

Vehicle(s) Used

2024 BMW M2

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Test Report

Introduction

This is our first official test on our new BMW M2 test vehicle - a joyful little track-blasting coupe that we've found to be well-matched for pushing the highest echelons of road-worthy tires to their limits while still calming down just enough for a quick grocery run. It's an ideal pairing for the characteristics of the tires we're evaluating here.

Max Performance Summer tires showcase the zenith of their manufacturers' summer street tire technology, embodying the exceptional engineering prowess of their designers. These tires deliver outstanding performance on the road with refined agility and unparalleled dry traction that can harness the power of some of the most formidable vehicles ever sold alongside consistently top-tier wet traction. Similarly, Ultra High Performance Summer tires offer a remarkable blend of versatility and reliability, adapting to various conditions while maintaining superior performance. Both categories feature tires with unique characteristics that aim to be at the top of their field, with an ideal nudge toward comfort or performance in either direction. There's no question these tires tend to be some of the best the industry offers, but how does each distinct personality manage to make this happen?

We'll introduce each, break down our experiences with them on our real-world road ride, then discuss their traction and subjective behavior on both a wet and dry track to understand how these tires act when pushed to their limits, mimicking the kind of high-speed emergency maneuvers you might need to deal with in a sudden crisis.

Let's get into it!

Test Summary

Although we've examined all these tires previously, it's worth noting that, just like different shoes work better for different people depending on preference, pronation, gait, and so on, there's no "best tire" for every car in the same way there's no "best shoe." Testing Ultra High Performance Summer tires alongside Max Performance Summer tires and the new vehicle gives us valuable insight into each while keeping our data current and as broadly comparable as possible as new tires enter the testing cycle.

The Continental ExtremeContact Sport 02 is a tire that is difficult to say enough good about. It manages to be comfortable on the road and capable of securely handling any situation or maneuver asked of it without getting out of sorts. It does its job well as a Max Performance Summer tire, but without forgetting that driving should be enjoyable even when it isn't pedal-to-the-floor. Michelin's Pilot Sport 4S takes a more focused attitude here, and it has the objective scores to back it up, with great dry performance bolstered by test-leading lap times and braking distances in the wet. There's no questioning its performance chops, and for many drivers, the trade-off in on-road comfort is worth getting every drop of power out of their vehicles.

Yokohama's ADVAN Apex V601 feels more like it's chasing, or perhaps echoing the ExtremeContact Sport 02, with its on-road comfort rivaling the Continental tire in subjective evaluation. It's not a bad performer either - and would be an easy rival for most of the tires in this test around a dry track, even if you could hear it gaining well before you could see it in your mirrors. However, its behavior in the wet needs attention, as it lagged well behind its categorical peers, but to brake further and lap slower than an Ultra High Performance Summer tire is hard to ignore. The General G-MAX RS, in many respects, benefits enormously from being compared to Max Performance Summer tires. We expected some qualitative differences between the categories, but for it to perform as closely as it did with its peers in the test is a strong credit to the tire. It might not be the technical best in this arena or any one category, but as a value proposition to be competitive, it's an enticing option.

As a Max Performance Summer participant, Bridgestone's Potenza Sport has certainly been popular with customers and has shown it can perform at a high level with excellent braking and cornering traction; there's no question it's an eager rival. That eagerness, notably in the Potenza Sport's aggressively fast steering, is its strength and weakness, as it doesn't feel as properly mated to the tire's other characteristics to make the most of it in a smooth, professional way. The reality that it has also sacrificed a good deal of on-road comfort along the way only hurts a tire that is, by all accounts, still very good at what it does. Finally, the Firestone Firehawk Indy 500 is a classic example of what has, by most accounts and thousands of reviews, been a darn good tire for a long time. Like an old boxer that still has knockout power, the champion's soul is in there, but time and technological development wait for no one; there really wasn't any metric in this test that it could keep pace with the other tires on, including its Ultra High Performance Summer peer. It was never so far off that, as a value consideration, it wouldn't be worth a look, but at this tier of competition, drivers are rarely looking to settle for "pretty good."

Other Tire Tests

We can't help ourselves, we're always testing more tires out on the track. It's a good thing too, because with so many different categories and so many different features to evaluate, there aren't many places you're going to find this type of in-depth analysis. It's not a stretch to say with each tire test we do, you're going to learn something new - and maybe even find your next set of tires.

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