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#183 |
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Country Boy 4 Life
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I LIKE TIRES! |
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#184 | |
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#185 | |
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The track you are running makes a big difference though. The tire demands at PIR (Look at that stupid thing )https://portlandraceway.com/?/fan_guide/track_map are totally different then a track like ORP
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#186 |
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Only users lose drugs.
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It depends on how hard you're working the tires...if you're at a track with fast sweepers, long straights, etc, then a 225 could certainly be faster than a 245. But at a track that works the tires harder and top speeds are lower, a 245/255 could be a better choice. And likewise, in applications like autox which work the tires even harder and speeds are even lower, the big tire combo is almost certainly the fastest way around. I doubt CSG is recommending 225s for that application.
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#187 | |
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#188 |
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Senior Member
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I am not sure if CSG Mike has ever tried a 205/55R16 tire on this car. Issue is that you never got the racing spec trim in US with the smaller tires and let's face the following. The tread width of a 205/55R16 tire on a 6.5" wheel is 7.4". The tread width of same tire on a 7" wheel, which is quite common in Gazoo 86/BRZ races, might be a bit more. The tread width of a 225/45R17 tire on a 7.5" wheel is 8.1". So the difference on tread width is pretty small and I expect to not make a big difference even on a tight track. Additionally, the smaller 16inch wheel has the advantage of better weight distribution. It is not always about total weight, but where the weight is distributed. You need to have a minimum rotation inertia on a tire/wheel combo.
Reference on specs: https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tires...del=ADVAN+A052 Last edited by nikitopo; 04-20-2018 at 02:10 AM. |
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#189 | |
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#190 |
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There were some users on the Gazoo races complaining about the brake rotor size and how much they can handle the extra wear when the pads and tires are becoming every year better and better. The Gazoo 86/BRZ races are really a 10 lap race every time, so don't expect that much with these brakes. If you are a professional racer and looking for something better, then a 17" wheel is a better option.
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#191 | |
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Only users lose drugs.
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And a 16" wheel actually makes the distribution of the weight of the wheel/tire unit worse, not better. The wheel is always going to be lighter than the tire. By adding to the sidewall, and reducing the diameter of the already lighter component (wheel), you're shifting more weight to the outer circumference of the unit (rubber and steel cord weighs more than the forged aluminum that would be in their place). Overall you might be a bit lighter than a comparable 17"/205 combo, but the difference would probably be offset by the increased inertial mass out at the circumference. Which makes any advantage purely one of unsprung weight, not rotational. But the whole issue is academic and not likely to matter one bit either way.
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#192 | |
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#193 |
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Only users lose drugs.
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Well it's just math, not theory. But either way it's not going to make me change my 225/50-16 setup. I'm quite happy with how well it works.
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Last edited by venturaII; 04-20-2018 at 11:16 AM. |
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#194 | |
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#195 | |
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#196 | ||
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Senior Member
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1. Most of the weight of the tire is at the tread, which is in exactly the same radial location for same-diameter tires. 2. Despite slightly more sidewall, tires for smaller-diameter wheels weigh the same as same-width and same-diameter tires for a larger wheel diameter (I just checked nine different Extreme Perf tires in 225/45-17 and 225/40-18 on Tire Rack). And since the 1" smaller wheel size has the tire bead .5" radially inboard, rotational inertia is going be be (very slightly) *less* vs. same-weight 1" larger size, as some of the weight is further inboard. 3. As opposed to tires, which weigh the same, you *do* see increased weight with larger-diameter wheels, typically 1 lb. per inch diameter for lightish-weight wheels. And unlike with tires, that weight isn't radially in the same place, it's 0.5" further out. More mass, further from centerline => increase in polar moment of inertia. As you point out, though, the wheel weight isn't nearly as big a contributor to polar moment as tire weight, so not a HUGE effect on overall rotational inertia, but still, the larger-diameter wheel plus tire will have more. Quote:
225/45-17 was 0.1s quicker to 60 and in the 1/4-mile vs. 225/40-18, 1mph faster in the 1/4, so yeah, pretty small difference. But in 0-100, the larger-diameter setup was 0.6 seconds slower. At a track with longish straights, that could be a significant difference in lap times. That's with same make/model tires and make/model wheels, only difference being 17" vs. 18". Last edited by ZDan; 04-21-2018 at 01:24 PM. |
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