The Precision Driving Unit compared aftermarket tires to original equipment manufacturer tires outfitted on fleet vehicles when built on the assembly line for the purposes of testing.
The MSP tested the following tires: the Goodyear Eagle RS-A on the Dodge Charger, Ford Crown Vic (CVPI), Chevrolet Caprice, Chevrolet Impala, and Chevrolet Tahoe; the Firestone Firehawk GT Pursuit on the Charger, Ford CVPI, and Tahoe; the Cooper CS4 on the Ford CVPI, Impala, and Charger; the Nokian WR G2 on the Caprice and Impala; the Nitto NT 850 Plus on the Caprice, Impala, and Ford CVPI; and the Pirelli Pzero Nero on the Ford CVPI; and P6 tire on the Impala.
Tire evaluators purchased the tires from a retail store to ensure each tire was an actual production version. Goodyear, Firestone, Pirelli and Nitto categorized their test entries as "High Performance All Season," whereas Nokian labels its model as an "All Weather Plus" tire, and Cooper calls its tire a "Premium Luxury Touring" tire.
In the first set of braking tests of the Goodyear, Nitto, and Nokian tires on the Caprice, the Nitto tire performed best in wet and dry conditions. In the braking and turning test, the Nokian tire performed best.
In the test of the Cooper, Firestone, and Goodyear tires on the Charger, the Cooper tire performed best new in all three tests, but was too worn to be tested in the "worn" tests. The Goodyear and Firestone tires performed different in the dry vs. wet braking tests, with the Goodyear tire coming in first during the dry test and the Firestone coming in first in the wet, braking test. When braking during a turn for the worn tires, Goodyear came in first.