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| Wheels | Tires | Spacers | Hub -- Sponsored by The Tire Rack Specific topics relating to wheels and tires. |
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#71 |
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Drives: BRZ Pearl White
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#72 |
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#73 | |
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Quote:
Sure, you do the math, it isn't that tricky. You just need to compare the internal volume of two torus. Then change the pressures and compare. Before you spend too much time on the maths I can estimate it is about 5%. That would put the 225/45 x 17 at 33-34 psi or so if 35 psi were recommended for 215/45x17. You may also wonder why Porsche built hollow alloy wheels for their 959. Then you'd have to think hard about the effect of air pressure and wonder why air pressure inside the tire is so different from air pressure outside the tire. Also, why runflat tires are so tricky to make and why they handle so poorly. Give some thought to semi-pneumatic tires and you'll get the idea, possibly. But then why do solid rubber tires not work well and tires with some air in them work great? Food for thought, even for you. |
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#74 |
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What was said is they realise that there are so many unknowns that they can't actually answer the question accurately! Instead they gave a huge amount of advice and procedures on dialling in finding correct pressure.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to stonenewt For This Useful Post: | wparsons (09-16-2014) |
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#75 | |||
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Your stupidity knows no bounds!
What are you even trying to suggest? Quote:
Based on your theory (add 5% volume, remove 5% pressure) since the atmosphere is essentially an infinite amount of air, it should require almost zero pressure to support me, right? I realize that statement is idiotic, but it outlines the flaw in your logic. Quote:
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You're either illiterate, or so hell bent on posting dribble that you don't even see that your points aren't even arguments to what you're trying to argue. You're the expert, you tell us.
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Light travels faster than sound, so people may appear to be bright until you hear them speak... flickr |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to wparsons For This Useful Post: | Dipstik-sportech (09-16-2014), D_Thissen (09-16-2014) |
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#76 | |
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#77 | |
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i'm sorry, what?
Join Date: Jan 2012
Drives: Canada
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what's your point? "autocross", or autox, or solo, or solo 2, or cone chasing, what is understood to be autocross in north America, and you would have to be an idiot to confuse the use of the FRS in autocross and the dune-buggy, hill hopping dirt adventures they have in the EU.
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don't you think if I was wrong, I'd know it?
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#78 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Drives: 2013 BRZ satin white pearl sportech
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__________________
2013 SWP BRZ sportech. 11.11sec@129.01mph, 511whp on e70. FullBlown base kit, FullBlown built 9.5:1 engine, GTX3076R GEN2 turbo, 1700cc Bosch injectors, FullBlown flex fuel kit, FullBlown radiator and oil cooler, FullBlown custom 3" dual exit exhaust, act xtreme clutch, whiteline diff and subframe inserts, BC Racing coilovers, hotchkiss 18mm rear sway, is300 3.73 differential ... Never finished
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#79 |
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Banned
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This increases the tendency for this chassis to oversteer. It really doesn't need the help.
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#80 | |
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Banned
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#81 | |
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Banned
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Bear in mind you have to ask them the right question which is what is their recommended tire pressure for the BRZ fitted with the Michelin Pilot SuperSports in 225/45x17 size for the street. After they tell you that isn't the stock size they will be able to advise you what the recommended pressure is...for street applications. There is no correct tire pressure for competition applications for the simple reason that you're not trying to drive on the street. The initial post asks what can be done to improve handling on the street with the tires chosen. Frankly, 35 psi should present no problems whatsoever even if the ideal static cold pressure should be 34 psi for the slightly larger size. For the curious, it seems obvious that the car is supported by distorting the tire carcass by a set amount proportional to the vehicle weight, the object being to maintain the contact patch in the correct shape intended by the tire manufacturer. Tire pressure for any particular tire is selected by vehicle weight. Period. If the internal volume of the 215 tire is x litres and the internal volume of the 225 tire is, let us estimate, x plus 5% of x, then obviously the required pressure to ensure the tire is distorted by the correct amount should be about 5% lower. Now if you actually look at tire grip plotted against load and tire pressure you can see that raising tire pressures above those recommended for street use will generally increase overall grip for any normal street driving. This is a diminishing returns process and usually adding 2 psi above recommended will produce the best result. Suggesting that overheating the tires by driving on the street will mean the tire pressure will go above optimum is stating the obvious and to no useful purpose. |
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#82 | |
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Banned
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#83 | |||||
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Senior Member
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Quote:
The front tires have to carry more weight, and need a little more pressure than the rears to work evenly. I fail to see how you're qualified to give any advice on tire pressures and their effect on handling since your only advice is to go with what the car manufacturer suggested, and you refuse to acknowledge that there is value in playing with pressures for street driving. You seem to completely miss the point that manufacturers do things for simplicity first, then for optimal usage. Don't believe me, look at your oil change interval vs mine. Yours is 10k km's because that's what all current Subaru's are, mine is 8k km's because that's what all current Toyota's are. Then look at what the US intervals are, they're longer than either of ours are on both brands. Knowing that, do you really think that the 35psi is optimal for performance, or was a safe easy to remember guideline? Also keep in mind they're giving a guideline based on people not checking their pressure as often as they should (as ambient temperatures shift). Saying 35psi cold all around is MUCH easier for them to publish than to say XXpsi front, YYpsi rear set when the tire reaches a temperature of ZZ *C. For someone that claims the suspension engineers were lazy and didn't do any work when adapting parts from the Impreza platform, you sure put A LOT of faith in how much thought went into the suggested tire pressures. Quote:
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Contact patch size will dictate required pressure (larger contact patches will need less pressure), but contact patch and internal volume are not directly related in any way. If you're comparing a mountain bike to a road bike tire and required pressures, it's because of width and contact patch, not volume. 5L of air at 10psi has the exact same ability to support weight as 500L of air at 10psi, assuming the same contact patch (or footprint). Quote:
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__________________
Light travels faster than sound, so people may appear to be bright until you hear them speak... flickr Last edited by wparsons; 09-16-2014 at 11:38 PM. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to wparsons For This Useful Post: | Dipstik-sportech (09-16-2014) |
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#84 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Drives: 2013 BRZ satin white pearl sportech
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A lawyer giving advice on tire pressure and suspension setup, which ends up being completely opposite of what people with real world experience are saying. This can only end amazingly
__________________
2013 SWP BRZ sportech. 11.11sec@129.01mph, 511whp on e70. FullBlown base kit, FullBlown built 9.5:1 engine, GTX3076R GEN2 turbo, 1700cc Bosch injectors, FullBlown flex fuel kit, FullBlown radiator and oil cooler, FullBlown custom 3" dual exit exhaust, act xtreme clutch, whiteline diff and subframe inserts, BC Racing coilovers, hotchkiss 18mm rear sway, is300 3.73 differential ... Never finished
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