thanks Andy
tyre compounds extremely change from brand a model a to brand a model b
so telling the ideal working temperatures for season tyres hard to tell really..
however, a normal summer tyre must be able to work from +10 and up without serious performance loss but in reality their performance changes when it reaches 45 celcius in shadow (and take into account the tyre temperaure after several braking under those conditions) ..
so there is really a very wide working range which is next to impossible to implement with a single compound..
besides high end performance tyres really need warm up ( like potenzas I used before)
otherwise you will be dissapointed.. as a conclusion for summer tyres if you dont want surprises normal passenger tyres are more suitable for normal daily traffic usage (and also will be better im temperatures lower down the scale).
now winter and snow tyres.. there are very very different thread and compound designs.. some are more towards city usage in winter and cold ( those tyres dont perform adequately in ice..been there done that) but they will be way better than a summer tyre.. (youtube has lots of videos about that) I always choose my winter tyres for ice conditions sacrificing dry grip (so its obvious that no one single compound and pattern can meet the winter tyre needs) because ice is the most harsh condition that nails you whereever you are or throws you out of the road.. temperature range obviously below 10 celcius but I use them until end of march even at 20 celcius (dry grip of course a bit less at that temperature)
all season tyres: imo its more suitable for UK conditions thinking of budget (and if you dont plan to hammer the car)
theoritically it must work in all temperatures but in reality tyre makers sacrifice grip in higher temperatures..