My Cayenne Turbo 958 has 265/40 R21 105Y XL M0 summer tyres fitted (Conti Cross Contact UHP).
The list of expected tyres for the Cayenne Turbo from the manual is:
265/50 R19 110Y XL Wheel: 8.5 J x 19, RO 59
275/45 R20 110Y XL Wheel: 9 J x 20, RO 57
295/35 R21 107Y XL Wheel: 10 J x 21, RO 50
First, the garage I had it serviced at pointed out that they had homologation "M0” for Merc instead of "N*” for Porsche. I may be wrong but I thought this fairly inconsequential and not a safety / insurance problem. Anyway, digging deeper I then found there are only Porsche N tyres available in size 265/40 R21 for the lower load factor of 101, non-XL. 105 XL is the highest available but no Porsche approved ones… I think this means that 265/40 R21s are not intended to be fitted on a Cayenne, but on a smaller Porsche.
Initially I thought I must have narrower rims, but I found they are indeed marked 10Jx21 ET 50 (Turbo II design 7P5601025M), so they could have the standard 295/35 fitted. I thought the narrower tyre might be a bit better for efficiency and noise, and it looks and handles fine. I found that in this technical manual from Conti (page 54), 265/40 r21 is approved to be fitted on a 10J rim, although they have 9.5J highlighted as the default.
Aside from the tyre brand and homologation, my question is: does it matter that I’ve got 265/40, load factor 105 XL on the car or not? I don’t understand why the previous owner deviated from the 295s; doesn’t seem to be price since actually the 295s are marginally cheaper. These tyres have about 6mm tread left so would still last quite a while.
Thanks!
Key:
The list of expected tyres for the Cayenne Turbo from the manual is:
265/50 R19 110Y XL Wheel: 8.5 J x 19, RO 59
275/45 R20 110Y XL Wheel: 9 J x 20, RO 57
295/35 R21 107Y XL Wheel: 10 J x 21, RO 50
First, the garage I had it serviced at pointed out that they had homologation "M0” for Merc instead of "N*” for Porsche. I may be wrong but I thought this fairly inconsequential and not a safety / insurance problem. Anyway, digging deeper I then found there are only Porsche N tyres available in size 265/40 R21 for the lower load factor of 101, non-XL. 105 XL is the highest available but no Porsche approved ones… I think this means that 265/40 R21s are not intended to be fitted on a Cayenne, but on a smaller Porsche.
Initially I thought I must have narrower rims, but I found they are indeed marked 10Jx21 ET 50 (Turbo II design 7P5601025M), so they could have the standard 295/35 fitted. I thought the narrower tyre might be a bit better for efficiency and noise, and it looks and handles fine. I found that in this technical manual from Conti (page 54), 265/40 r21 is approved to be fitted on a 10J rim, although they have 9.5J highlighted as the default.
Aside from the tyre brand and homologation, my question is: does it matter that I’ve got 265/40, load factor 105 XL on the car or not? I don’t understand why the previous owner deviated from the 295s; doesn’t seem to be price since actually the 295s are marginally cheaper. These tyres have about 6mm tread left so would still last quite a while.
Thanks!
Key:
- In 110Y, 110 is the Load Factor, higher number supporting more weight per tyre
- XL is Extra Load. I’ve no idea what the difference between a higher Load Factor number is vs XL on a lower one.
- RO means Rim Offset (as per Porsche manual), ET is usually used instead. ET 50 means a 50mm axial offset.
- 9 J, 9 means rim width, J is the shape of the rim.
- ‘Homologation’ M0 = optimised for Merc, N0, N1, N2 = optimised for Porsche