Yokohamas are relatively cheap for their value. Kuhmo is also a good tire for less. Tirerack has this one for $38 each for your car:
http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tires.jsp?tireMake=Kumho&tireModel=Touring+A%2FS+795&partnum=865SR4TAS795&vehicleSearch=true&fromCompare1=yes&place=1&speed_rating=S&speed_rating=T&speed_rating=U&speed_rating=H&speed_rating=V&speed_rating=Z&speed_rating=W&speed_rating=Y
2007-01-08 08:35:56
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answer #1
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answered by Trackerrrr 4
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2000 Honda Civic Tires
2016-10-19 08:52:09
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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As long as it is not an Si your tire size should be a P185/65R14 85S. This is a very common size - there are literally hundreds of tires on the market suitable for this vehicle
While there are no "bad" tires anymore, some are most definately better than others. Since tires are the #1 safety feature on your car, this is a poor area to "go cheap". The difference between a quality set of tires with great ride/wear/traction and a cheap set of rubber things that are black, round and hold air is not so much.
If you want great value-for-the-money I would recommend the Yokohama AVID Touring. Gets great reviews, very modestly priced for an 80k-mile tire, rides good and all the rest of it. These are highly competitive with other big-name tires in the 60-70k mile range, which makes them such a good value. A Kuhmo 758 isn't a bad choice either.
Don't get fixated on a low price. I have customers who come into my shop about every year or two to get a new set of the cheapest tires we have. 30k miles later, they are back again to get another set. They end up buying maybe 3 sets of cheap tires when they could have had one set of something much better like the aforementioned Yoko's for substantially less overall expense. But there is not talking to them about it. All they see is the price tag up front.
If for financial reasons or if you REALLY don't plan on keeping the car a lot longer you need to wade in the shallow end of the pool I would suggest the Firestone FR380. It's a notch above the entry level imports in price but 2 or 3 in quality. And its a name-brand tire that is widely available and thus easy to replace in an emergency.
2007-01-08 13:55:52
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answer #3
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answered by Naughtums 7
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
I have a 2000 Honda Civic and I need new tires. What would be a good cheap brand and how much would it cost?
2015-08-24 05:49:27
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answer #4
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answered by Joeann 1
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there a lot of things you can do with the engine you have now. Headers another addition well you are going there you might as well change the Cat with an aftermarket high flow cat. For between 150 - 200 Skunk2 makes a Vtec and Fuel controller you would most likely to get someone to tune it but you can change when your vtec responds and and u can increase or decrease your fuel curve. That is just a couple of ideas there is plenty more it all depends on how much money you want to spend or how in-depth you want to get.
2016-03-19 12:30:42
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Please please please. Don't go with cheap tires. You may think they are saving you money, but having to replace them more often and they aren't very good quality. I used to subscribe to the cheap tire route, but when I had one blow out after only 500 miles and I crashed my car, I changed my mind.
I recommend the Firestone affinity. They are very good all season tires and I purchased them for $90 each.
2007-01-08 08:27:17
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answer #6
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answered by Ron Porkmore 4
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hi this site is good & you can pick your self " mytyres.co.uk "me i am going for a set of vanto"s they tyre test abut the best mid /top range
2007-01-08 08:34:37
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answer #7
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answered by gordon m 1
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