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-   BRZ Second-Gen (2022+) — General Topics (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=98)
-   -   Difference in handling with wider wheels/tires (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=148599)

ggbrz 01-27-2022 12:20 PM

Difference in handling with wider wheels/tires
 
Can anyone with wider aftermarket wheels and tires on their car speak to the differences in handling felt compared to stock? Coming from my STi, the only letdowns for me on my test drive for the BRZ was light steering and lack of road feel. Wondering if going 235 or 245 on 18x8.5 will aid in that department? I assume going with coilovers might also help with the road feel. TIA!

bcj 01-27-2022 12:53 PM

????

Sure it was a twin and not an SUV?
Utterly unable to process the question under this context.

ggbrz 01-27-2022 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bcj (Post 3500242)
????

Sure it was a twin and not an SUV?
Utterly unable to process the question under this context.

You honestly are of the belief that the 2nd gen BRZ does not have light steering? Compared to a run of the mill econobox? Maybe just barely heavier. By any other standard it’s light, and that’s not a unique opinion for these cars. The road feel I was expecting to be worse - that’s the reality of coming to EPS from hydraulic steering. Not bashing the cars, just looking for peoples experience…

Racecomp Engineering 01-27-2022 01:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ggbrz (Post 3500235)
Can anyone with wider aftermarket wheels and tires on their car speak to the differences in handling felt compared to stock? Coming from my STi, the only letdowns for me on my test drive for the BRZ was light steering and lack of road feel. Wondering if going 235 or 245 on 18x8.5 will aid in that department? I assume going with coilovers might also help with the road feel. TIA!

Get a good alignment.

At a minimum, add the OEM crash bolts for a little more front negative camber.

Are you on the Michelin PS4 tires or the 17 inch primacy tires?

- Andrew

ZDan 01-27-2022 01:59 PM

Steering *weight* =/= steering *feel*...

ggbrz 01-27-2022 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racecomp Engineering (Post 3500268)
Get a good alignment.

At a minimum, add the OEM crash bolts for a little more front negative camber.

Are you on the Michelin PS4 tires or the 17 inch primacy tires?

- Andrew

Appreciate the response! This was just on a test drive of the premium, so primacy tires. Will definitely keep that in mind if I decide to buy. I’m sure once a steering lockdown comes out for this gen it’ll solve the problem, but was curious on the impact of wider wheels and tires alone

ggbrz 01-27-2022 02:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZDan (Post 3500270)
Steering *weight* =/= steering *feel*...

Agreed, I intended to separate the two in case wider wheels on these cars improves just one or the other. Steering weight definitely increased when I went 9.5 wide on my sti so curious if it’s similar with EPS

TommyW 01-27-2022 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ggbrz (Post 3500274)
Agreed, I intended to separate the two in case wider wheels on these cars improves just one or the other. Steering weight definitely increased when I went 9.5 wide on my sti so curious if it’s similar with EPS

When you increase unsprung weight and add a bigger contact patches the steering will get heavier

NickSpaghetti 01-27-2022 03:09 PM

On the last gen, upgrading to better rubber in the same size definitely increased steering weight.

Still not as heavy as my STI, but I found the feedback was there where it counted (for detecting grip loss and countersteering).


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

ZDan 01-28-2022 01:20 PM

IMO increased steering weight isn't "better". Of course with stiff-sidewall tires load will ramp up more immediately with steering inputs. But I haven't found my '17s steering to necessarily get much if any *heavier* overall with 245/40-17 200tw tires vs. 225/45-17 winters. I've never been a fan of artificially *heavy* steering (typically via excessive caster) anyway... Tastes vary of course, but just putting it out there, "heavy" steering shouldn't necessarily be a goal.

StraightOuttaCanadaEh 01-28-2022 01:51 PM

I like heavier steering just from a tactile point of view. Having said that, I've been into weightlifting for 2 decades now and noticed maybe a tiny increase in steering weight going from oem wheels and tires to my current setup, which is either 255 or 265 section tires and 18x9.5 wheels. I was told the steering was going to be SOOOO heavy - this was not the case for me.

My only complaint is that there is almost too much grip. I got the wider wheels in preparation for FI, which never happened, and may not happen, but I do prefer how the 18s look as opposed to 17s. So instead of kinda teetering at the edge of grip and the rear end sliding out ever so slightly in the corners to let you know where the limit lies, the wider wheels with grippier tires will fight the slip in a very ugly way and eventually - IF you've managed to break the grip, it will very abruptly come back and instead of a quick dab of counter-steer, you'll have this ugly left-right-left sequence that does not align with the character of this car at all imo.

In short, while I do like the increased grip and enjoy winters and winter tires for allowing the car to be more playful, I say do not make this decision lightly. Really think about whether this is the kind of car you want and keep in mind the delicate handling is ruined with wide wheels and grippy tires.

Edit: as for the feel, there isn't any either way, it's an electric rack. After fitting Perrin steering rack lockdown, I do feel an increase in something - let's say a connection to the steering rack itself - but the granularity of the steering FEEL has not increased. Still on mute

Mars 01-28-2022 02:17 PM

My 14 FRS with 18x8.5s on 225/40/18 General GMAX RS's has way to much grip for the street. I have no clue why people go for the 9.5 widths other than boosted or just for looks.

Fletch 01-29-2022 06:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ggbrz (Post 3500235)
Can anyone with wider aftermarket wheels and tires on their car speak to the differences in handling felt compared to stock? Coming from my STi, the only letdowns for me on my test drive for the BRZ was light steering and lack of road feel. Wondering if going 235 or 245 on 18x8.5 will aid in that department? I assume going with coilovers might also help with the road feel. TIA!

I had the same concern when I initially tested the car before I purchased it. Note that the steering is adaptive and stiffens up when you push the car more. Its still a little on the light side but much better than I initially thought.

ZDan 01-29-2022 09:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by StraightOuttaCanadaEh (Post 3500569)
Edit: as for the feel, there isn't any either way, it's an electric rack. After fitting Perrin steering rack lockdown, I do feel an increase in something - let's say a connection to the steering rack itself - but the granularity of the steering FEEL has not increased. Still on mute

You should try an S2000...
IMO electric steering isn't inherently any worse for feel than hydraulic. 1st-gen FT86 is way WAY better than earlier sports car electric assist (s2000). I preferred my BRZ's steering at the track and on the street vs. the hydraulic-assisted steering in my 987.2 Cayman that people raved about as the last "good" Porsche steering (I found it too slow and non-linear). Maybe they took a step back with the 2nd gen?


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