The TerrainContacts would have been my first choice for her car but the G015s offer better snow traction. The Conti doesn't rate as well in snow.
That's good info; thanks, man. Maybe the Wildpeaks are a good middle point between the road-friendly TCs or G015s and the off-road focused KO2s. I'll do more research on that.
Yeah, I noticed that about the TerrainContacts' snow traction reviews, and was a little surprised by it. I've driven on them through some heavy snowstorms, and they are significantly better than the Hankook Dynapros I had on previously. They pale, of course, in comparison to the (as of last winter) brand-new Altimax Arctics 12s that I'd put on my wife's Forester. I suppose it's telling that when a friend of hers got stuck 20 miles away in a particularly bad snowstorm that I took the Forester to go get her, not the Outback. Still, driving sensibly (and with decades of snow driving experience under my belt), I've never felt in danger with the Continentals.
Now having said all of that...
So I've had some uneven wear, and what seems like fast wear with mine. I've been running about 35/33psi in them for the most part (cold). Been keeping a closer eye on alignment lately as well, so that certainly contributes to the uneven wear part. But at around 20k on them, I'm down to less than 7/32 on all tires... Would be interested to hear what pressures you run yours at and what your wear rate has been like. I too spend most of my time on the road, so switching to K02's isn't ideal, but at this point I'm not quite sure what to do (still have an untouched Terrain Contact on the spare too, so only having to buy 4 would be nice, versus 5).
...I agree with you, Jeff, about the wear on the TCs (which I keep at the same pressures as you). There's *no* way I can keep them on for another winter given their current tread depth. I put them on my Outback in December of 2017 and, while they're still great in the dry and wet (a function of whatever excellent compound they use, I'm sure), by the time I would've switched to my snows on my previous cars (all turbo Subarus) in late October, I figure the tread will be dangerously low for ANY conditions. That's fewer than two years on a set of tires, during which I put maybe 22-25,000 miles on the car. I chalked the wear up to my on-road driving style (which, maybe embarrassingly, hasn't changed much since I switched from my STi) and the fact that I now don't spread the wear load over two sets of wheels in a given year (summers and snows).
But I now remember an early review of the TerrainContacts where it mentioned that their rolling resistance seemed much greater than other tires in their class. I think the sticky compound that makes their dry and wet traction so good also makes them wear faster, and the extra rolling resistance would also explain my decreased mileage (compared to my previous A/Ts, not regular tires).
So, CN: Yes, regardless of their very high treadwear rating (680), they seem like they'll be shot in under two years. The question is whether I should see that as a negative, or just consider them a necessary consumable like brake pads or engine oil that, OTHER than wear, perform their designated function very well.