I read on here all the time and there's been many many threads about tyres and many people label tyres with less grip as "ditch finders"
Well I would like to set the record straight. When you jump in a car you drive it gently and build up confidence in the grip available by building up corner speed etc until you feel the point at which the Tyres start to break grip and you remember this and drive the car within that limit.
You would have to be an idiot to jump in a new car or your old car with new Tyres on it and drive it into corners hard without re-learning the level of grip available!
Hence my statement Tyres aren't ditch finders BAD DRIVERS ARE DITCH FINDERS.
I agree with you OP, if that makes you feel better
I was also flamed for making a similar point a while back. It's not a point that will gain much traction on this particular car enthusiast forum though.
I find the catastrophising and hyperbole used by some contributors in this thread in order to make their point rather unhelpful.
Mr & Mrs Average in all likelihood do not buy UHP tyres, yet they don't mow down children in significant numbers, nor are they crashing into tractors on blind bends, nor are they aquaplaning and ending up in the central reservation or spinning out of control on roundabouts.
Most people drive sensibly, legally and within their own limits. Does mum of three need F1A2s to complete the daily school run. Do I need F1A2's on my weekly jaunt up and down the motorway? How you answer depends entirley on your standpoint but it doesn't make you wrong or right. You can argue it cogently either way.
The vast majority of the driving public go about their daily lives driving sensibly, observing the highway code, showing consideration for other drivers and they somehow surviving the experience intact.
Yes, there will always be a minority of stupid drivers who are a liability on the roads irrespective of the conditions, the car they drive or the quality of the tyres on each axle.
Yes, there will also be sensible drivers who make uncharacteristic errors of judgement and cause/are involved in accidents.
If your budget allows there's nothing wrong with purchasing UHP rubber, similarly I don't demonise people for buying budgets or mid range tyres if they so choose. Just buy the best you can afford.
Drive sensibly and within limits and you'll probably be fine irrespective of what tyres you have AS LONG AS THEY'RE LEGAL. Of course there is always the probability of exogenous factors (tractors, diesel spillage, standing water, children etc etc etc). How you quantify those risks is a personal decision based on individual preference.
I present no evidence to back my assertion but overall I lean towards the sentiment that it's driver error that leads to 'most' accidents irrespective of the tyre rather than the quality of the tyre itself.
That's not to say that tyres aren't a factor though.
Flame on!
