I have not got a GTD yet but I assume they come with Bridgestones, and I see lots of people commenting on the Bridgestones, can anyone tell me what the issue is?
4 posts of opinion later...
surely then they are not fit for purpose as VW should be held accountable and provide tyres that are suitable to the cars performance, has anyone challenged VW about this?
Wow that escalated quickly! Going from a general question, to not fit for purpose and wanting to challenge one of the biggest car manufacturers in the world? The tyre is fitted to Porsche and the Ferrari 458 and probably a host of other cars as standard. VW will politely tell you to "jog on" unless they had a bad month for sales at the dealer.
So the tyre?
Are Bridgestone the best tyres you can fit to your car? No
Are they the noisiest tyres at 73db or 72db if its the Mercedes approved ones? No (most "premium" brands are between 70db and 72db on average so 1db is neither here nor there and its very dependent on the surface)
Are you going to crash into a ditch with them? Not unless you are complete idiot.
Are they fit for use? Yes you have a medium size hatchback diesel, or R or GTi, not a McLaren P1 needing Trofeo R's
If you don't work within the grip limits/circle of the tyre you will lose traction, like with all tyres. There are plenty worse Landsail Xiangwong province tyres on the market besides the leading 4-5 brands Michelin, Continental, Bridgestone, Pirelli, Goodyear etc. In Germany they fit another brand (can't remember now), but they also have de-restricted Autobahns where as our speed limit is 70mph among other differences with the roads between the UK and Germany.
Your car will be fine, enjoy your new purchase and when the tyres wear out look to another brand to have a sligthly better tyre. OEM+ is what most enthusiast do, same with the shocks, when they wear out look to Bilstein or Ohlins, but I wouldn't worry too much about the tyres on a VW hatchback of any type as long as they are a premium brand.