Steve Payne wrote:My guess would be as these are made in low volumes they are probably hand made. I am sure the figure I heard quoted by Pirelli was they used to run about 150 tyres in a batch and that would take them up to 3 years to sell. How many cars used this size of tyre and how often do they need replacing? I am only on my 3rd set after 100k miles.
Agreed ! The same problem exists with the very special Michelin TRX tyres, popular on luxury cars of the '80ies, i.e. Citroen CX, BMW 5 / 6 / 7 series. I ran a set of 180/65 R390 (metric dimension) TRX's on a '81 Saab 900. The TRX tyres worked ok on dry surfaces, but were rather difficult in the wet. I even spun the Saab off the deceleration strip of the autobahn, but luckily between two guide poles to stop on the grass, no damage to the car and no impact crater
The TRX are so awfully expensive, Michelin made a batch every few years, so you could end up with a difference of 10 or 12 years in tyre age between the front and back wheels

No wonder everybody changed to standard rims !
=> That's why i would recommend all-weather-tyres made for current vehicles, there you get modern casing design and a up-to-date rubber compound.