Tire Rack Reviews on '05 GT 17" Tires
Originally posted by Soccer2789@August 8, 2004, 10:23 PM
oh nevermind, i was thinking of the KDWS, which is all season. I thought they were introducing a peformance inch-up upgrade with all season tires as opposed to summer's
oh nevermind, i was thinking of the KDWS, which is all season. I thought they were introducing a peformance inch-up upgrade with all season tires as opposed to summer's
You can't go wrong performance wise with either the KDW's or KDWS's.
Originally posted by kevinb120@August 6, 2004, 9:03 PM
They are very good tires. I still am not sure what all the hub-ub about 18"s are, no one has even publicly run one around a track on stockers and reported how they do yet. Everyone assumes you just stick fat low profile tires on cars and its better, I have actually seen 'riced' out 'tuner' cars that are lowered with aftermarket tires get beaten by relatively stock setups on tracks. There is more to making a car handle then fat tires.
They are very good tires. I still am not sure what all the hub-ub about 18"s are, no one has even publicly run one around a track on stockers and reported how they do yet. Everyone assumes you just stick fat low profile tires on cars and its better, I have actually seen 'riced' out 'tuner' cars that are lowered with aftermarket tires get beaten by relatively stock setups on tracks. There is more to making a car handle then fat tires.
As profiles drop, the tire becomes flatter, presenting a less rounded contact patch. This make controlling camber that much more important. It GREATLY affects handling, and if the suspension isn't designed and tuned for the lower profile, your handling and roadholding could be adversely affected.
Then again, many people (including many people here) are more interested in looking like a show car than handling like a great road car. In the extreme case, people drop 22's on old Chevelles in order to make them look like artist renderings. They don't care if they ride horribly, aren't good in drags, and only work moderately well in the rear, saved by the fact that a live axle undergoes zero camber change in turns (while the front is doing all sorts of nasty things and you understeer off the edge of the skidpad)
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
JonathonK
Which is Better
3
Nov 17, 2017 12:02 PM




