>Does anyone know where to find these except through the dealer. When i
>sold my 850T-5 i included them. But now i want to get some for another
>car i have, plus for my moms car. And no I'm not some punk little kid
>wasting time, I'm 27 and my mom knows nothing about cars. Thanks in
>advance. You can reply here on the newsgroup, but it would be easier to
>drop me an email. jon@waite.tv
> Anyway, the tires you refer to are available through many sources.
> They are made in Sweden but not by Volvo; rather they are manufactured
> by Gislaved (name of a town in Sweden and location of the factory) but
> are now owned by Continental.
Continental has closed the factory and moved manufacturing out of Sweden.
One of the engineers behind the Gislaved winter tires now works for Nokian
Hakkapeliitta.
For winter i have Gislaveds on my 740 and Michelin Ivalo on my V70, both
with spikes.
Have never tried Hakka but they do have a good reputation.
Are you allowed to use spikes in the US?
/Anders W, mid Sweden
Jon - 01 Sep 2005 10:50 GMT
Nope, no spikes allowed :/ So they arent making the Gislaved tires
anymore? My 850T5 with the gislaveds were unstopable in the winter.
>>Anyway, the tires you refer to are available through many sources.
>>They are made in Sweden but not by Volvo; rather they are manufactured
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
> /Anders W, mid Sweden
Anders Wiklund - 01 Sep 2005 20:15 GMT
> Nope, no spikes allowed :/ So they arent making the Gislaved tires
> anymore? My 850T5 with the gislaveds were unstopable in the winter.
Continental continues to make the Gislaved tires, i dont know in wich contry
though.
http://www.conti-online.com/generator/www/com/en/gislaved/automobile/general/hom
e/index_en.html
I am a little surprised that you find the Gislaveds good without spikes, i
think they are engineerd to bee used with spikes.
/aw
doc@nospam.org - 04 Sep 2005 01:24 GMT
>> Anyway, the tires you refer to are available through many sources.
>> They are made in Sweden but not by Volvo; rather they are manufactured
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>Have never tried Hakka but they do have a good reputation.
>Are you allowed to use spikes in the US?
Hello Anders:
When you mention spikes I assume you are referring to what are
commonly called "studs" here. They are allowed in some states in the
US. I happen to live in Upstate NY near the Canadian border.
Most here think spikes or studded snow tires are not allowed here but
that's simply not true.
That said, they are only allowed in our region from October 16th to
April 30th. That makes perfect sense as it can start snowing here in
early October and last year we had our last big storm in May.
That said, so few drivers here use studded snows these days that I've
never heard of a driver being stopped or ticketed for going past the
deadline.
If others living here in the US are wondering if and when studded
tires are allowed here is a good link that list the regulations for
all US states:
http://www.rma.org/tire_safety/tire_maintenance_and_safety/seasonal_driving_tips
/regulations_2004.cfm
I reviewed the list and noticed that Mauna Kea Island in Hawaii allows
studded tires. That seems a bit bizarre to me as I had not realized
they had snow. Perhaps there is another reason they are allowed and
I'd like to hear from anyone who knows what it might be
Cheerio,
Doc
>/Anders W, mid Sweden