The Cayenne is a heavy vehicle and the Pirelli's are high performance,
"summer" or soft rubber compound tires. What's also happening is that the
Cayenne's suspension and the overall vehicle design allows it to handle
significantly better than most of the competition, that also puts a lot of
stress on the tires. I've driven a couple of Cayennes and they handle
pretty well for an SUV.
The appropriate long term solution is to put all season tires on it, which
will probably suffice for virtually all your driving needs...and the tires
will last longer as well.
Hope this helps some.
"PJ O'Donovan" <Xentinc@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:7df92e10-63b4-4d11-a691-e8c115dca19c@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>I am a 76 year old who bought a 2006 ****sche Cayenne S, Titanium
> edition in December 06.
>
> Since I put on a little less than 20000 miles, I put it in the shop
> with the dealer for its first service appointment. I noticed the tires
> showed wear and asked service to advise how many more miles I would
> get out of them. To my surprise I was advised that the tires should be
> replaced and advised the service manager to replace them.
>
> Previously I have owned and put hundreds of thousands of miles on 3
> different Mercedes and one BMW. sedans. Two of them were 8 cylinder
> vehicles. I do not recall any of them having the tire wear I
> experienced with the Cayenne but I consider the Cayenne the best car I
> have ever driven. I figured the tire wear. like the fuel consumption
> was the price of "fahrvergnuegen" of the Cayenne.
>
> After replacing the tires, I did a little research on the net and
> discovered the original and replacement tires were summer Pirelli
> Rosso high performance tires not recommended for driving in snow or
> freezing weather and replacement at even less than 20000 miles on the
> Cayenne was not unusual
>
> We live in Southwest Georgia and get no snow but we have family in the
> mountains of central Pennsylvania where they get plenty of snow and we
> intend to be driving up there in November and December over the
> holidays and expect to be doing so in the coming years..
>
> I guess it would make sense to invest in winter tires for the trip up
> there and then replace the winter tires with the summer tires when we
> return to Georgia for the rest of the year. When both tires have to be
> replaced I guess I could consider all season tires depending on the
> performance sacrifice.
>
> My question is if I do get two sets or tires for the two seasons
> should I also get an additional separate set of wheels or could I
> alternate the tires between the existing
> single set of wheels. Since I have titanium wheels, I would assume
> they are expensive.
>
> I would appreciate any advice along these lines
>


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