I'm planning on replacing the TSW alloys on my car with some TD Pro race 1.2's, but not sure whether to go for 13" or 15".
There isn't much diffference in price for either [wheels or tyres] and the range of tyres in 15" is much bigger.
Is there a real noticable advantage from fitting 13's?
Stu
...................The purists will tell you that you must have 13" and nothing else but I can't see how anyone could drive a car on our
roads with 13" wheels these days - some of the potholes around her are 3-4" deep you'd drive into a hole and not get out again!
I'd go for tire choice and 15" wheels personally.
Steve
Oh and very nice car buy the way
You will get a more comfortable ride on 13's and much better handling, mainly due to the higher tyre walls on the 13" tyre, the tyre wall will flex more and let go much later giving a much better feel of whats happening under your butt than a lower profile 15" tyre.
quote:
Originally posted by gottabedone
...................The purists will tell you that you must have 13" and nothing else but I can't see how anyone could drive a car on our roads with 13" wheels these days - some of the potholes around her are 3-4" deep you'd drive into a hole and not get out again!
I'd go for tire choice and 15" wheels personally.
Steve
I think the overall diameter of the wheel wouldn't be that much different. In fact I think having the smaller diameter wheel and larger profile
tyre helps absorb some of the pot holes we have.
I split the difference on my Indy and had a set of 14" Pro Races. This is mainly because it was a better fit over sierra running gear otherwise
I would have gone for 13". Got them from Demon Tweeks - they were special order to get the ET38 offset.
Tyre choice is fairly limited at 14" though, but they do R888's in this size and that was I wanted.
ETA - damn, beaten to it!
[Edited on 24/9/11 by StevieB]
quote:
Originally posted by mookaloid
oh and the ride will be better on 13s
cheers
Mark
I have only had 13" on mine, but have recently gone from 185 60 13's to 185 70 13's, the car feels much quicker now, SOOOO controllable, predictable - wish I had done it years ago
it depends on your setup. A car can be made to handle just as well on bigger wheels as long as you're not running a tiny profile tyre.
If 13"'s were the holy grail they'd be fitted on the modern extreme performance cars.
quote:
Originally posted by franky
it depends on your setup. A car can be made to handle just as well on bigger wheels as long as you're not running a tiny profile tyre.
If 13"'s were the holy grail they'd be fitted on the modern extreme performance cars.
quote:
Originally posted by afj
quote:
Originally posted by franky
it depends on your setup. A car can be made to handle just as well on bigger wheels as long as you're not running a tiny profile tyre.
If 13"'s were the holy grail they'd be fitted on the modern extreme performance cars.
They are, f1 wheels are 13 i think
quote:
Originally posted by franky
it depends on your setup. A car can be made to handle just as well on bigger wheels as long as you're not running a tiny profile tyre.
If 13"'s were the holy grail they'd be fitted on the modern extreme performance cars.
quote:
Originally posted by franky
it depends on your setup. A car can be made to handle just as well on bigger wheels as long as you're not running a tiny profile tyre.
If 13"'s were the holy grail they'd be fitted on the modern extreme performance cars.
Look at a like for like series where you can run what you want, ie 7's.
Ive run both I know which I would fit every time.
even with higher profile side walls you cant allways keep the rubber on the ground.........
This same spot at Cadwell I struggled to get airborne on 15's as I couldn't get the grip/drive our of the corner at the bottom of the
mountain as the car was wanting to slide/spin putting the power down whilst still cornering.
quote:
Originally posted by Jon Ison
even with higher profile side walls you cant allways keep the rubber on the ground.........
This same spot at Cadwell I struggled to get airborne on 15's as I couldn't get the grip/drive our of the corner at the bottom of the mountain as the car was wanting to slide/spin putting the power down whilst still cornering.
With 13" wheels and higher aspect raito tyres the wheel is much more like to survive a a blow out or encounter with a pot hole or kerb.
Generally with higher profile 13" tyres the slip angles will be higher for the same later grip but the breakaway more progressive and more fun
to drive close to the limit of adhesion.
Not adding anything really, but I have only done autoslalom on 13's. They are very predictable, but leave the car very low, which is a big stress when flat towing the car to events. I tore the welded exhaust mounting brackets off the car once (since bolted new brackets to the floor). Not road legal yet. Wish I'd done 15's to begin with for the simple reason that tyre choice is much larger and clearance. Did anyone notice I spelled rubber wheel wrong just for you?
quote:
Originally posted by RK
Did anyone notice I spelled rubber wheel wrong just for you?
And you have added an extra word Jon.
Thanks for the replies.
The RR of 13" on 185/60 13s is very similar to 15" 195/50 15s [which is what I have now]. The 13s are just over 70mm smaller.
On 185/70 13s the RR is bigger and 205/60 13s are pretty much the same as 195/50 15s, so ride height shouldn't be an issue.
Stu
It's about Unsprung Weight and Rotational Mass.
A smaller rim, even with large sidewall tires... Weighs LESS...than a large rim and thin tire.
And as a rotating mass, significantly less. Far outweighing :-) the claimed advantages of a low to no sidewall tire.
Again the F1 example.. where performance is Everything.
Sad truth is: Tall rims and skinny tires are all about posing, not performance
Small rims also limit the size of brakes and uprights.
When you have a tonne and a half of supercar travelling at 200mph, try get sufficient brakes in a 13" wheel...and then get the wishbones to react
the torque on a tiny upright.
Each suit an application
I have 185x70 on 13" rims - I have always found them to be totally predictable, and they do cushion you from bad potholes. I'm sure that bigger wheels and lower-profile tyres will give you better cornering - but my wheels & tyres give me plenty of notice when they're about to let go, resulting in a nice controllable slide rather than a sudden "oh sh*t" moment.
quote:
Originally posted by Bare
It's about Unsprung Weight and Rotational Mass.
A smaller rim, even with large sidewall tires... Weighs LESS...than a large rim and thin tire.
And as a rotating mass, significantly less. Far outweighing :-) the claimed advantages of a low to no sidewall tire.
Again the F1 example.. where performance is Everything.
Sad truth is: Tall rims and skinny tires are all about posing, not performance
13 inch rims arent used for performance in F1, theyre used because the rules dictate it!
High sidewall tyres arent a good answer, but necessary because no tyres are made for little lightweight cars.
In many cases larger wheels are driven by larger brakes and nothing else.
If yoy look at any race championship with freedom on wheel sizes they will be large, low profile and extremely light to house the biggest brakes
possible and have low profile tyres. The lower profile is less forgiving but acceptable in a race car.
Stu, After swapping to 13" rims, my car feels a lot better. Ride and avaliable secondhand race tyres also swing it in that direction.
ATB Dan.
I'll let you know after I get the 13,s to fit!
quote:
Originally posted by alistairolsen
13 inch rims arent used for performance in F1, theyre used because the rules dictate it!
High sidewall tyres arent a good answer, but necessary because no tyres are made for little lightweight cars.
In many cases larger wheels are driven by larger brakes and nothing else.
If you look at any race championship with freedom on wheel sizes they will be large, low profile and extremely light to house the biggest brakes possible and have low profile tyres. The lower profile is less forgiving but acceptable in a race car.
quote:
Originally posted by Jon Ison
quote:
Originally posted by alistairolsen
13 inch rims arent used for performance in F1, theyre used because the rules dictate it!
High sidewall tyres arent a good answer, but necessary because no tyres are made for little lightweight cars.
In many cases larger wheels are driven by larger brakes and nothing else.
If you look at any race championship with freedom on wheel sizes they will be large, low profile and extremely light to house the biggest brakes possible and have low profile tyres. The lower profile is less forgiving but acceptable in a race car.
Your missing the point slightly though , we are talking 7 type cars here, most are over-braked already with no need for all singing and dancing super duper huge brakes, most brakes on a 7 struggle to get up to optimum operating temperature, when was the last time you saw a 7 come off track with smoke coming form the brakes because there so hot ? Ive yet to come across brake fade even after 1 hour non stop runs.
I wouldn't run a 1000kg + track car on 13's, I also wouldn't run a 500kg 7 on 15's with low profile tyres.
All imho of course.
I switched from 6x14 185 60 14 superlites, to 6x13 175 70 13 revolutions.
on the scales, the revo was 2 kg lighter. incl. tyre 2,5 kg.
(also saved 7kg in total on front brakes when switching to wilwood powerlites)
car feels more comfy and better handling, more predictable although I haven't drivin that much after the wheel swap
[Edited on 26/9/11 by Jos Fury]
quote:
Originally posted by alistairolsen
13 inch rims arent used for performance in F1, theyre used because the rules dictate it!
High sidewall tyres arent a good answer, but necessary because no tyres are made for little lightweight cars.
In many cases larger wheels are driven by larger brakes and nothing else.
If yoy look at any race championship with freedom on wheel sizes they will be large, low profile and extremely light to house the biggest brakes possible and have low profile tyres. The lower profile is less forgiving but acceptable in a race car.
quote:
Originally posted by britishtrident
Yes with a racing slick breakaway characteristic is more controlled by compound than anything else
i just got these 13 wheel porn very rare rims
Description
[Edited on 26/9/11 by imp paul]
Thanks for all the replies - it was real world experience of switching to 13s that I was after [though the theory is good as well], which given what
has been said backs up my thoughts that 13s are definately worth going for.
Stu