914 flares |
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914 flares |
timmaria |
Nov 28 2014, 06:59 PM
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 14 Joined: 13-August 14 From: Fresno, Ca Member No.: 17,773 Region Association: Central California |
I just put new tires and flares on my v8 914 . It still spins the tires effortlessly. I'm now running 245 50 16s, and 225 50 16's up front. Brakes and 930 axles are next.
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Bruce Hinds |
Nov 28 2014, 09:37 PM
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#2
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V-8 madness Group: Members Posts: 733 Joined: 27-December 06 From: Port Orchard, WA Member No.: 7,391 Region Association: Pacific Northwest |
Balance is everything - which isn't to say that not spinning the wheels is the ultimate goal! It's fun yes, but the proper balance is driving the curves and how it handles. Old hard tires or sticky racing slicks won't change the "characteristics," just the break and controllability.
By balance we're talking about how it handles in a perfect neutral power 4 wheel drift. Yes you're in the corner at the maximum speed, it you lift your foot off the gas the back end comes loose. If you push down on the power the front end will drift a little. This allows you to steer with throttle! Soft sticky tires allow you to explore that region and maintain control more than mileage tires or old hard ones, but either way it's all about how the car is balanced. I have a narrow body car with old 215/60 x 15's on 7" wheels on the back and I do have to feather the gas a bit in 2nd, but other than that it just locks up the 330 or so HP and it goes. I'm running 200lb springs on the back and stock sway bars all the way around. Those are 215/60x15 all the way around with 15x6 up front and 15x7 on the rear. Actually a hard size to come by anymore. |
timmaria |
Nov 28 2014, 09:55 PM
Post
#3
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 14 Joined: 13-August 14 From: Fresno, Ca Member No.: 17,773 Region Association: Central California |
Balance is everything - which isn't to say that not spinning the wheels is the ultimate goal! It's fun yes, but the proper balance is driving the curves and how it handles. Old hard tires or sticky racing slicks won't change the "characteristics," just the break and controllability. By balance we're talking about how it handles in a perfect neutral power 4 wheel drift. Yes you're in the corner at the maximum speed, it you lift your foot off the gas the back end comes loose. If you push down on the power the front end will drift a little. This allows you to steer with throttle! Soft sticky tires allow you to explore that region and maintain control more than mileage tires or old hard ones, but either way it's all about how the car is balanced. I have a narrow body car with old 215/60 x 15's on 7" wheels on the back and I do have to feather the gas a bit in 2nd, but other than that it just locks up the 330 or so HP and it goes. I'm running 200lb springs on the back and stock sway bars all the way around. my rear springs tested out at 208 and 211 lbs. Those are 215/60x15 all the way around with 15x6 up front and 15x7 on the rear. Actually a hard size to come by anymore. |
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