What tyre sizes would you run for track 200bhp?
#1
What tyre sizes would you run for track 200bhp?
Hi all,
As the title states what width tyre would you guys be running for a turbo miata at around 200whp?
currently im on 195's with Toyo T1R's (not the best track tyre I know)
i will be upgrading to R888's and was wondering if 195's would be up for the job or to up it to 205/225 all round ?
cheers !
As the title states what width tyre would you guys be running for a turbo miata at around 200whp?
currently im on 195's with Toyo T1R's (not the best track tyre I know)
i will be upgrading to R888's and was wondering if 195's would be up for the job or to up it to 205/225 all round ?
cheers !
#6
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225/45s
Always run the widest, lightets wheels you can afford, and fit. If you plan on getting other wheels, get 9s or 10... or 11s. Then you would run a 245 or 275.
#7
1) The cheap solution is to use whatever wheels you've got and buy the biggest streetable tires that will physically fit. 225s in one of the 200tw "cheater" compounds (Rivals, RS2s, Star Specs, whatever) will fit on 15x8s (hell, they'll fit on 15x7s). They won't be as fast as they would be on wider wheels, but they're still faster than 205s or 195s.
2) Next up is to buy the widest wheels that will fit the car and put the widest streetable tires that will fit as well. This probably means 15x9s with the same 225s.
3) Next step is to go with dedicated track tires. This means a second set of wheels, a set of non-streetable tires (Toyo RRs, Hoosiers, whatever) and a way to get the wheels to the track (tire trailer or tow rig for the Miata). Obviously this is a big step up in capital equipment for the tow rig, or a smaller cost for a tire trailer but more hassle for swapping tires at the track.
4) Next above this is to go super wide on the tires (275 Hoosiers, for example, or some wide race slick compound) and wheels (15x11s are good, I hear). This entails chopping up the car to get them to fit.
I'm at step 3, using 225 Toyo RRs on dedicated 15x9 6ULs, towing the car to the track. It sounds like you probably want to be at step 2.
There is a case to be made that for lower-power cars, step 4 is "too much", because it is possible to add enough aero drag that it actually slows the car down even though it's getting more grip in the corners. This is heavily dependent on the course and power levels. You'll never hit it at an autox, for example. 200 rwhp on a big, fast track I guess it's possible. I really doubt you'd see it with 225 tires, though.
A few other points. If you're competing in a particular class, then obviously the class tire and wheel rules will modify this. 245 Victra RC-1s may change the "225" suggestions above -- they're relatively new and I don't know a lot about them. AFAIK there aren't any other "streetable" 245s around.
--Ian
#8
The budget needs to include all of the other things necessary to run the tires. Realistlcally, I can see four levels:
1) The cheap solution is to use whatever wheels you've got and buy the biggest streetable tires that will physically fit. 225s in one of the 200tw "cheater" compounds (Rivals, RS2s, Star Specs, whatever) will fit on 15x8s (hell, they'll fit on 15x7s). They won't be as fast as they would be on wider wheels, but they're still faster than 205s or 195s.
2) Next up is to buy the widest wheels that will fit the car and put the widest streetable tires that will fit as well. This probably means 15x9s with the same 225s.
3) Next step is to go with dedicated track tires. This means a second set of wheels, a set of non-streetable tires (Toyo RRs, Hoosiers, whatever) and a way to get the wheels to the track (tire trailer or tow rig for the Miata). Obviously this is a big step up in capital equipment for the tow rig, or a smaller cost for a tire trailer but more hassle for swapping tires at the track.
4) Next above this is to go super wide on the tires (275 Hoosiers, for example, or some wide race slick compound) and wheels (15x11s are good, I hear). This entails chopping up the car to get them to fit.
I'm at step 3, using 225 Toyo RRs on dedicated 15x9 6ULs, towing the car to the track. It sounds like you probably want to be at step 2.
There is a case to be made that for lower-power cars, step 4 is "too much", because it is possible to add enough aero drag that it actually slows the car down even though it's getting more grip in the corners. This is heavily dependent on the course and power levels. You'll never hit it at an autox, for example. 200 rwhp on a big, fast track I guess it's possible. I really doubt you'd see it with 225 tires, though.
--Ian
1) The cheap solution is to use whatever wheels you've got and buy the biggest streetable tires that will physically fit. 225s in one of the 200tw "cheater" compounds (Rivals, RS2s, Star Specs, whatever) will fit on 15x8s (hell, they'll fit on 15x7s). They won't be as fast as they would be on wider wheels, but they're still faster than 205s or 195s.
2) Next up is to buy the widest wheels that will fit the car and put the widest streetable tires that will fit as well. This probably means 15x9s with the same 225s.
3) Next step is to go with dedicated track tires. This means a second set of wheels, a set of non-streetable tires (Toyo RRs, Hoosiers, whatever) and a way to get the wheels to the track (tire trailer or tow rig for the Miata). Obviously this is a big step up in capital equipment for the tow rig, or a smaller cost for a tire trailer but more hassle for swapping tires at the track.
4) Next above this is to go super wide on the tires (275 Hoosiers, for example, or some wide race slick compound) and wheels (15x11s are good, I hear). This entails chopping up the car to get them to fit.
I'm at step 3, using 225 Toyo RRs on dedicated 15x9 6ULs, towing the car to the track. It sounds like you probably want to be at step 2.
There is a case to be made that for lower-power cars, step 4 is "too much", because it is possible to add enough aero drag that it actually slows the car down even though it's getting more grip in the corners. This is heavily dependent on the course and power levels. You'll never hit it at an autox, for example. 200 rwhp on a big, fast track I guess it's possible. I really doubt you'd see it with 225 tires, though.
--Ian
People i I have been speaking to have been putting me off the idea of a wider tyre saying it's not needed but I felt myself that that's what the car was lacking !
cheers, Jack
#15
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Flares will mean much more drag, highly counterproductive. Your car will be faster just from replacing xxr's with a proper offset tire, because of scrub radius and such. 6ul's are for winners.
#19
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^TIMES 2 on that. Freaking fantastic, long wearing, grippy tire. Love mine, already have another set ready to go on when these finally die (6 days on the track and not nearly toast yet).
#20
He's in Europe, so no 225-45-15 RS3's, no BFG Rivals, no NT-01's, none of the Maxis tires are sold either. AFAIK the only 225 tires in stock on the continent are R888s (800$ a set) and a rally tire that's measures 205mm wide. Buying a set of 15x9 wheels+tires in that eco-system might not be the smartest thing to do.
205 availability is much better, I would think a set of 15x8's will be a smarter investment. They are plenty wide to get you started on track and you'll have actual tire choices ranging from cheap (Federals, nankang) to decent (R888s) to expensive but fast (Avon's, Advans, Dunlops, Michelins and plenty of full slicks). The quality difference between cheap slicks (lots of choices) and R888s is more then enough to compensate for the smaller width.
205 availability is much better, I would think a set of 15x8's will be a smarter investment. They are plenty wide to get you started on track and you'll have actual tire choices ranging from cheap (Federals, nankang) to decent (R888s) to expensive but fast (Avon's, Advans, Dunlops, Michelins and plenty of full slicks). The quality difference between cheap slicks (lots of choices) and R888s is more then enough to compensate for the smaller width.