After settling a lawsuit last
month with disgruntled owners of Michelin run-flat tires, Honda dropped
the tires for
the 2010 model year. It was another disappointment for Michelin and other
makers of run-flat tires in a 17-year
effort to win customers in the United States.
When run-flat tires appeared
here in 1992, they were expected to win wide acceptance as original equipment.
The prospect of no flats or blowouts seemed like a strong pitch.
But except for applications
on a few luxury and other vehicles, the tires were largely ignored because
of their
high cost--$200 to $500 each--and their impact on fuel economy.
A Michelin study released last
year found that only 3 percent of drivers worldwide want run-flat tires.
U.S.
market share is well below 1 percent.
BMW AG, General Motors Co.,
Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. and several other companies continue to offer
run-flat tires on a few vehicles. But at American Honda Motor Co., the 2009
Honda Odyssey Touring and Acura RL
were its last models available with run-flat tires. "Never say never, but
we have no current plans" for other models,
says Honda spokesman Sage Marie.
After being punctured, run-flats
typically can travel only 50 miles before they shred, says Jennifer Stockburger,
a program manager at Consumer Reports magazine.
Depending on its size and the
vehicle, a replacement run-flat costs about $200 to more than $500, compared
with about $100 for a typical high-quality tire. Also, not all tire stores
repair or stock the tire, and some owners
in the Honda suit said the tires wore out at around 15,000 miles.
The owners of 94,000 2005 to
2007 Odyssey Touring and some 2006 and 2007 Acura RL models joined a
class action suit in U.S. District Court in Maryland against Michelin and
Honda. The owners alleged unreasonable
tread wear, high replacement costs and difficulties finding a repair shop.
The tires have been discontinued.
As part of the settlement, announced
June 23, Michelin said it is offering a 3-year/36,000-mile warranty on the
tires to owners of the affected models. Also offered is a $300 rebate on
a new Odyssey or Acura RL or $110
for the purchase of Honda-approved Pax spare-tire kits.
Michelin spokeswoman Lynne Slovick
said Michelin "will continue to offer zero-pressure tires [run-flats] if
we get
specific requests from vehicle manufacturers." Michelin run-flat tires are
offered on the Chevrolet Corvette ZR-1
and several BMW models.
Honda declined to comment on the settlement.
Dave Cowger, GM's engineering
group manager for tire and wheel systems, said run-flats cost about a third
more than a conventional tire, but he declined to provide figures.
GM also said run-flats are 20
to 40 percent heavier than a conventional tire because of a thicker sidewall.
They also have higher rolling resistance, so they reduce fuel economy by
about 1 to 2 percent, GM says.
But Cowger is not giving up
on run-flat tires at GM. He said the tire industry expects to cut weight
and rolling
resistance in three to four years.
As if GM didn't already have
enough to worry about!