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#71 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2018
Drives: 2018 BRZ Limited, 2017 Sportage
Location: Las Vegas, NV
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One more thing to consider. The wider the tire, the more square the contact patch and the more prone the tire is to hydroplaning. You knew that, right? You want to be able to drive your car in the rain safely, don't you? Choosing a tire for regular street use is far different than choosing one for track where you have smoother roads, controlled weather, and know turns vs. straightaways. Good luck.... |
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#72 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Drives: miata, mazdaspeed protege, ls430
Location: socal
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so the guy explaining all of this (emillio700), is the owner/operator of 949racing. he makes racing wheels for the miata, twins, elise, mustang and they are the real deal. he doesnt even bother with a 7" wide wheel for our platform. andy hollis, another amazing driver (more than a doezen national autox championships), tire tester for grm and and asking for take off 8s because the car he needs them on cant take 9s. all this is regarding the first 2 generation miatas. the car that is smaller, slower and hundreds of pounds lighter than the frs. i still dont know why you bring up slamming cars. literally zero relation to the argument at hand. or hydroplaning for that matter, might as well just put some snow tires on the car. or wait, what happens if you go off a bridge, replace the tires with rudders. you want to be safe in the lake dont you?
__________________
Drive upgrades. Don't buy them.
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#73 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2018
Drives: 2018 BRZ Limited, 2017 Sportage
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 394
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Quote:
I don't know how to get this through to you, but the best tire/wheel combo for the street is different than it is for racing on a track. You don't know when it is going to rain, so on a street car, hydroplaning IS an issue. So when DSPORT modified their Miata, they wanted wheels and tires that were aggressive, but could be driven on the street effectively. The tire they chose was a 215/45/17. But that Miata already had modified suspension and was lowered. And of course, the main reason, at least in my case to own a BRZ is the fun of driving it. Here's an interesting article about driving fun you should read: https://arstechnica.com/cars/2015/09...da-mx-5-miata/ Tirerack has a video about running three different tires on the 86 which you should see. The one they liked best was not the stickiest one. Again, this is a complicated issue and you have to decide whether you want a car that is good on the street, is good on the track, or is one you want to look much faster than it is, i.e., extra wide tires, lowered, big wheels, etc. I've decided I want the best street car with the best ride, and good performance. The OEM Primacies do slide too much and I just don't like polished wheels on a car that has little other chrome. So I am doing a little bit about looks, but keeping it fairly close to stock. You've obviously decided otherwise. I cannot really rationalize, from a performance perspective, changing much from stock, except that I just don't like that polished look and the OEM tires slide a bit too much for me. By the way, which BRZ do you drive on a daily basis from which you have all of this experience? You can have the last post. I'm done. I hope some of the issues mentioned here will help others make their own decisions. Have a great day!!! |
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#74 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Drives: '15 BRZ RA
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@fatoni You are confusing racing with autocross. The latter is another story. You don't have big straights and high speeds. And we are talking here about stock performance or almost stock performance cars which is the main parameter. If emillio says that the same rules apply on a race track, then he doesn't have real experience in this area or he just tries to sell his products ...
And just accept it: Autocross isn't racing http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/201...s-isnt-racing/ If you are an autocrosser, you should try someday the real thing . Have a good day too!
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#75 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Drives: miata, mazdaspeed protege, ls430
Location: socal
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__________________
Drive upgrades. Don't buy them.
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#76 | ||||
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Glorious BRZ Master Race
Join Date: Apr 2011
Drives: Subaru Libird
Location: Race Wars
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https://www.subaru.co.jp/en/news/arc...e_2_91012.html Toyota even collaborated with Dunlop on a 225/40R18 tire with "Direzza II 86" stamped on the sidewall. http://tirepro-r.com/blog/2012/09/86.html ![]() https://toyota.jp/customize/86/14r-60/performance/ is the 100-unit limited production 14R60 with an essentially stock powertrain but this wheel/tire package: (Fr 18×8.5J inset 30 / Rr 18×8.5J inset 46)ブリヂストン製専用タイヤ ”RE-11A 3.3T” (235/40-R18) Quote:
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And "forged" has varying methods and levels of quality. I've seen a forged wheel from a known high end brand break more easily than cast wheels due to unsound manufacturing techniques. Can't speak to the TRDs but TRD doesn't manufacture forged wheels. They contract suppliers. The TRD SF2 is forged and costs more than TWS (~$1k apiece on Amazon) because it's TRD branded but supplied by TWS. I doubt TWS makes your TRD wheel because it's a budget wheel and looks it. The kind of wheel Release Series 2.0 owners sell for a few hundred because it's a stock wheel (which you may want to hunt on). The Titan 7 and XXR 527F wheels look insanely better on a similar budget and nowhere near black in color. Regarding the original topic of your thread, I see almost no progress. This thread is a dead end the way it's going. Just a lot of highly philosophical noise (from my practical perspective). I'm still not clear what matters to you. How millimeters and half inches ruin performance? Need us to convince you to buy a budget stock wheel that looks like what you specifically don't want? I suggest you post on other wheel threads if you haven't already instead of bogging in argumentative minutiae. People with more knowledge and less noise still hang around this forum. The noisy ones have moved onto the Facebook 86 enthusiast page.
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#77 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Drives: '15 BRZ RA
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#78 |
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Glorious BRZ Master Race
Join Date: Apr 2011
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__________________
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#79 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2018
Drives: 2018 BRZ Limited, 2017 Sportage
Location: Las Vegas, NV
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You've done a lot with your car and given your supercharger, wider wheels are called for. But that was not the thrust of this topic. It was simply whether, given the use and price, that the TRD wheels was best for a BRZ that is not going to be highly customized with a supercharger. You are trying to justify your setup to those of us who just want to have a fun car to drive safely. So many people here say the OEM Primacies are not good for this car. Given that I don't have any specific experience with the BRZ, I listened. The change in rims is only because aesthetically, I just don't like the stock Limited rims but still want 17's for ride quality. Obviously, you don't care much about ride quality. There are people with more knowledge on many subjects with more knowledge than me. I will let others, who are not committed to justifying their purchase of wide wheels and are objective, judge that. You do realize your comments make absolutely no sense, don't you? |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to rvoll For This Useful Post: | nikitopo (04-09-2018) |
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#80 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2016
Drives: 2015 BRZ
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Interesting, i never realized lowering a car 15-25mm is considered "slamming"
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Vital For This Useful Post: | Jordanwolf (04-09-2018), switchlanez (04-09-2018) |
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#81 | |
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Rice King
Join Date: Jul 2017
Drives: '19 FWD master race CTR
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Y'all should drive Egoboost Mustangs. So much opinion here... ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() :b arf:
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Glorious Honda.
Know my 5x120 GREATNESS PEASANTS. |
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#82 | |
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Glorious BRZ Master Race
Join Date: Apr 2011
Drives: Subaru Libird
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Except maybe for the Dunlops all those wheels/tires I posted were factory options chosen for these cars! Now I see why I don't make sense; you're clearly biased to deny facts.
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#83 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2018
Drives: 2018 BRZ Limited, 2017 Sportage
Location: Las Vegas, NV
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We have different objectives. I'm going for a car that is a good, but fun, daily driver, and has decent ride quality. I'm not going to supercharge the car, or track the car, or push the car aggressively through corners. I've had a bevy of Porsches over the years and have done all of that. I got rid of my last Porsche about 2 years ago after ALWAYS having a sports car. I just miss the feeling of a sports car, didn't want a Porsche again, seriously looked at the MX-5 RF, and chose the BRZ. My first sports car was a Volvo P1800 and my second a Triumph TR6. I really liked the feeling of that type of car. Some of the need for ride quality is my wife, to be honest. Thus, I have no need for really expensive wheels, but still want a fairly strong one. Also, the stock tires slide a bit too much for me and I wanted something a tad stickier. (I've always upgraded the OEM tires) That will suit me just fine. Given those ride quality concerns, I wanted to stick with a 17" wheel, even though the 18's look better as the taller sidewall has more give. The TRD wheel seemed to be one of the few that checked all of my boxes and will give a slightly flusher look. I would like to lower the car an inch for looks, but I do think that might have an effect on ride quality. I was looking at the TRD springs as they would not require any other suspension changes. Since you have those springs, what are your thoughts on on them? All of the damper alternatives seem to be stiffer than stock, so they are not part of my picture. Even the adjustable Koni's are stiffer. In case you ask why I would want a sports car if I'm not going to push it, it is because the driving dynamics just gives me pleasure. I like the way it corners and feels on the road, unlike my SUV and sedans. And it brings me back to the cars I really liked to drive, especially the TR6. By the way, I am going to put on 225/45's rather than 215's (even with the slight speedo error) because with the Pilot Sport 4S, the tread width is narrower than OEM and it will give a slightly better ride quality. We will not agree on the NECESSITY of having wide wheels and tires. Nor will my experience lead me to believe, with this type of unmodified car, that you will get any significant performance improvements. The only way to truly settle that discussion is to put both options on the same car and check lap times. Tirerack's testing on the 86 running different tires with a race car driver and lap times, convinced me of that on this car. They got plenty of stick with the upgraded 215's -- in fact, too much stick for their liking. I just can't see how a wider tire would help in that case. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to rvoll For This Useful Post: | nikitopo (04-11-2018) |
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#84 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2015
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rvoll: are you sure on MPS4S thread width being narrower then oem? IIRC Primacies had rather narrow width for "specced width", and at least PSS on contrary had relatively very wide for a size.
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