GLS550 terrible on ice
Just recently replaced my 2011 ML550 with a 2017 GLS550. Currently has Yokohama Ice Guards 265/50/20. Had to drive on a very bumpy and icy highway today (mostly ice covered, but bumps and chunks left over from snow plows) and nearly **** my pants. Was going about 60 (kph) (37 mph approx) and the car kept swaying side to side. It felt like it was driving in very strong crosswinds. At one point, it almost felt like the back was going to shoot sideways. I turned off all the assist features and put it in sport mode - that seemed to help a little bit. Once i got on snow covered roads, it seemed to drive fine, but I've had similar experiences with this car on dry roads as well, where it just doesn't seem to want to keep a straight line.
I guess my question is WTF is going on? My ML550 is like a tank on any road. Is this an issue of tires, it it an issue of the lane keeping system/assisted steering/assisted braking, or is the car just crap?









Just recently replaced my 2011 ML550 with a 2017 GLS550. Currently has Yokohama Ice Guards 265/50/20. Had to drive on a very bumpy and icy highway today (mostly ice covered, but bumps and chunks left over from snow plows) and nearly **** my pants. Was going about 60 (kph) (37 mph approx) and the car kept swaying side to side. It felt like it was driving in very strong crosswinds. At one point, it almost felt like the back was going to shoot sideways. I turned off all the assist features and put it in sport mode - that seemed to help a little bit. Once i got on snow covered roads, it seemed to drive fine, but I've had similar experiences with this car on dry roads as well, where it just doesn't seem to want to keep a straight line.
I guess my question is WTF is going on? My ML550 is like a tank on any road. Is this an issue of tires, it it an issue of the lane keeping system/assisted steering/assisted braking, or is the car just crap?
The simple truth is that everyone slips on ice. Driving slowly is the better course - 35mph is pretty fast and doesn’t give you much time to react and correct course.
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We are right above the snow line and only only a few times a year - except for this year - do we get accumulations of snow that we need to drive in. 1,000' down the mountain, the snow hardly sticks around, and I do a ton of SoCal freeway driving so snow tires wouldn't make sense - snow tires are pretty uncommon on this little mountain given the infrequency of snow that stays around. So, I got new Yokohama Geolander tires. I also got chains. This last snowfall, I was heading down the mountain, with chains on, on streets that had been plowed but had a layer of frozen, icy snow just in parts - not covering the whole street. I used the hill descent button (which puts you at 4mph - pretty slow), and put in "slippery mode" and manual - it was doing ok, though at no time does it have the secure, grounded feel that the Volvo has. However, at one point on the mountain, gravity and loss of traction took over, and I started slipping several times. Meanwhile, at least four other vehicles passed me going down, none with chains or obvious snow tires. It was awful.
I'm not sure what more I can do aside from spend $10k to get narrower wheels than these horrible 21" things the vehicle came with. But even then, I'm not convinced that is the silver bullet that would solve the GLS's problem of feeling always on the verge of sliding out of control on any sort of wintry road conditions. This year in the CA mountains we've gotten way more snow than usual, but I am seriously thinking of selling the GLS because I feel so unsafe - particularly when other vehicles seemed to handle the conditions just fine.
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I was originally looking for a GLS 450, but because I was looking at used vehicles I couldn't find one optioned enough, which is the main reason I went with the GLS550 (it had standard features like sun blinds and ventilated seats that were hard to find on a 450 - but I hadn't realized how much of a detriment it would be to have these 21" wheels - assuming that's the main culprit for the 550's horrible handling in winter conditions.)
those people you see speeding by are foolish. All vehicles slip on ice. The only way to prevent accidents is to drive slow enough with enough space in front that you have time to stop. And try to time your pace so you don’t have to stop at an intersection when you are on a hill!

We are right above the snow line and only only a few times a year - except for this year - do we get accumulations of snow that we need to drive in. 1,000' down the mountain, the snow hardly sticks around, and I do a ton of SoCal freeway driving so snow tires wouldn't make sense - snow tires are pretty uncommon on this little mountain given the infrequency of snow that stays around. So, I got new Yokohama Geolander tires. I also got chains. This last snowfall, I was heading down the mountain, with chains on, on streets that had been plowed but had a layer of frozen, icy snow just in parts - not covering the whole street. I used the hill descent button (which puts you at 4mph - pretty slow), and put in "slippery mode" and manual - it was doing ok, though at no time does it have the secure, grounded feel that the Volvo has. However, at one point on the mountain, gravity and loss of traction took over, and I started slipping several times. Meanwhile, at least four other vehicles passed me going down, none with chains or obvious snow tires. It was awful.
I'm not sure what more I can do aside from spend $10k to get narrower wheels than these horrible 21" things the vehicle came with. But even then, I'm not convinced that is the silver bullet that would solve the GLS's problem of feeling always on the verge of sliding out of control on any sort of wintry road conditions. This year in the CA mountains we've gotten way more snow than usual, but I am seriously thinking of selling the GLS because I feel so unsafe - particularly when other vehicles seemed to handle the conditions just fine.
There are so many conflicting thoughts with this reply so it would help to address some of them:
- Left out of the handling explanation between a Volvo and MB is what tires on the Volvo. It doesn't sound like the Volvo has the same performance level tires and suspect the may even be M+S rated for at least being somewhat effective in snow. Tire Rack.com in general shows the Continental UHP as a Street/Sport Truck Summer Tire which means they are NOT recommended for winter weather driving as well as having "N/A" for winter/snow survey stats. It's not reasonable to say the handling was awful when it's to be expected. No performance or summer tire does a good job in snow. The answer+ stay out of the snow with summer tires.
- "snow tires wouldn't make sense": Perhaps not in the true sense of "dedicated snow tires", but a M+S rated tire would be better than summer tires. "We are right above the snow line and only only a few times a year - except for this year..." So the answer is, for those exceptions= stay off the snow with summer performance tires.
- With family in California, I know certain areas and conditions have snow chain requirements which means even with dedicated ice/snow tires there are conditions that are a factor of nature which affect handling. This is NOT because of the brand of vehicle. It's understandable that different vehicles will handle differently yet people don't realistically stop to discuss vehicle weight, what their tire pressure affecting traction is, what their tires are rated for in ice and snow, and so on.
- Slippery Mode does not ensure or improve tire grip on the road surface by increasing the coefficient of friction.
- Even with summer tires, if they are not inflated properly, tire inflation is definitely going to affect handling.
- "I'm not sure what more I can do aside from spend $10k to get narrower wheels than these horrible 21" things the vehicle came with". It's a general understanding of what tires can and actually do
Blame anything but the vehicle in this case. 10K is not only unnecessary, it's still not going to solve driving too fast for conditions, nor will it take away from the need for proper tires and the proper air pressure, or tires with a suitable light/heavy snow & ice rating. People I know with performance cars have tires with similar characteristics as the Continental UHP and they do not take those tires out in the snow and expect safe handling.
- Research tires on websites such as tirerack.com and simply change the tires for $1K-$2K and sell the Continental tires. Otherwise, please don't endanger your life or the lives of others by expecting tires alone to keep you safe. The laws of physics are at work, and even a highly rated ice/snow tire such as the Bridgestone Blizzak are not going to make a vehicle always handle like it does on dry pavement.
Last edited by SUV John; Mar 6, 2023 at 04:37 PM.
- "I'm not sure what more I can do aside from spend $10k to get narrower wheels than these horrible 21" things the vehicle came with". It's a general understanding of what tires can and actually do
Blame anything but the vehicle in this case. 10K is not only unnecessary, it's still not going to solve driving too fast for conditions, nor will it take away from the need for proper tires and the proper air pressure, or tires with a suitable light/heavy snow & ice rating. People I know with performance cars have tires with similar characteristics as the Continental UHP and they do not take those tires out in the snow and expect safe handling.
- Research tires on websites such as tirerack.com and simply change the tires for $1K-$2K and sell the Continental tires. Otherwise, please don't endanger your life or the lives of others by expecting tires alone to keep you safe. The laws of physics are at work, and even a highly rated ice/snow tire such as the Bridgestone Blizzak are not going to make a vehicle always handle like it does on dry pavement.
I realize that wheels/tires are the logical answer, but the GLS550 wasn't optioned with different wheels that I'm aware of, the dealer was of no help in trying to inquire and was the one who mentioned $10k for aftermarket changes. I actually solicited the hive mind for recommendations on practical wheels/tires (which I appreciated, as it confirmed one reasonable option being the Geolanders). But of course another response I received was, to paraphrase, this was the wrong car for my type of docile mountain driving and that it's a powerful beast for dry pavement. Sure, but I don't think it's unreasonable to expect that it handle a very modest winter road with new M+S tires, chains, and conservative driving - but it appeared to be the poorest vehicle on the road going down the mountain that day. If that's the concession required for driving this without aftermarket wheel mods (or if it absolutely requires snow tires each year for the most minimal amount of snow) then that is something to take into account I suppose. And if that's the case, then perhaps it isn't the car for me or others who don't want to be worried about storing/installing snow tires just to get through minimal amounts of snow each year without dangerously sliding.
This is not a rant at you, of course, and I do appreciate your thoughtful response; I am just supremely disappointed in what I consider to be subpar performance of a pretty basic nature.




I think if I were in your position I'd find the best alignment shop I could and ask them to take a look at it. You want someone who knows what adjustments have what effects, not someone who knows how to change things to make the needles line up on the machine.
The GLS 550 as you probably know was only offered with 21" wheels. I just had no idea how big of a difference that would make in wintry conditions. So I now have 295/45-21 wheels that are now all Yokohama Geolander X-CV (M+S). If there was a ready option to swap wheels for something smaller/narrower, I would definitely consider it. But since there doesn't seem to be an "off-the-shelf" option, it's a daunting research project for me. I find it less daunting to think about switching vehicles to something whose standard configuration simply works vs "modding" something at significant cost to achieve a basic level of suitability.
I think if I were in your position I'd find the best alignment shop I could and ask them to take a look at it. You want someone who knows what adjustments have what effects, not someone who knows how to change things to make the needles line up on the machine.
Blizzard of '78 - my parents lived down the Cape at that time and ate a ton of washed up lobster (not sure if it was the blizzard or a later flood) and I was born addicted to lobster a few months later. And I never once used chains in Mass. either.




Another factor is the overall weight of the car. Combine a heavy load with incorrect alignment and you get accelerated wear and unpredictable handling.
With chains on the rear the car should track straight. It may not steer, but it should track straight!
Were they metal chains?
Last edited by John CC; Mar 7, 2023 at 02:36 PM.
[...]
Were they metal chains?
Really appreciate all of your thoughtful responses here (and sorry to the OP that I highjacked your thread but hopefully it is helpful for you and others).
Last edited by Beemie; Mar 10, 2023 at 12:58 PM.
So I did some digging and found the following in 20":
Tires: (the easy part) - I would look into Vredestein's Wintrac Pro Performance Winter tire in size 255/55-20 or 265/50-20 (BTW your OEM size should be 295/40-21 not 295/45-21 posted above) IF you are able to find a suitable 20" wheel not wider than 9".
Wheels: (this IS the difficult part)
option 1 is 20x9.5 MSW Type 48 (excellent quality and beautiful rim too), but it is not in stock now(expected by end of the month) and may require small front spacers because this wheel is listed for X166 GL450, but Luke would know for sure if this wheel with et52 clears 275mm front rotors and the calipers of your car. The issue with 9.5" wide wheels is that wider tires (275/50-20, but still much better than 295 section A/S) are required which negates somewhat what you're trying to accomplish;
option 2 is to ask Luke if they have 20x8.5 or 20x9 wheels with carrying load rated for your car (there maybe some that are not listed on their web)
option 3 (be careful here) is eBay looking for "replica" 20x8.5 or 20x9 wheels advertised specifically for X166 GL/GLS.
Last edited by threeMBs; Mar 10, 2023 at 06:05 PM.
Now on dry summer roads the opposite is true - wider tires are preferred hence requirement for wider rims.
So personally I would not compromise to stay with a singe 20" wheel choice.
An other possibility, one I would look into seriously if one can "live" with their look, is getting pre-owned OEM (or replica) X166 GL450/GLS450 20x8.5 (or even 19x8.5) wheels with narrow winter tires and use quality 25mm DRA spacers (like H&R's p/n 50556659) to clear calipers due to OEM 20"/19" wheels' high offset of et62.



