= Monsters of Grip: Nine Summer-Performance Tires =
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= Monsters of Grip: Nine Summer-Performance Tires =
In This Story>
- + Introduction
- + Ninth: Pirelli P Zero
- + Eighth: Dunlop Direzza Sport Z1 Star Spec
- + Seventh: Toyo Proxes R1R
- + Sixth: Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 2
- + Fifth: Continental ExtremeContact DW
- + Fourth: Hankook Ventus R-S3
- + Third: Yokohama Advan Neova AD08
- + Second: Bridgestone Potenza S-04 Pole Position
- + First: Michelin Pilot Super Sport
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Comparison Tests
arrow<HGROUP>Monsters of Grip: Nine Summer-Performance Tires Tested
Serious speed requires serious rubber.
</HGROUP></HEADER>
- July 2012
- BY K.C. COLWELL
- PHOTOGRAPHY BY MARC URBANO
Even armed with huge horsepower, wind-tunnel development, and a fear-free driver, cars wouldn’t be able to attain big speed without tires capable of handling the inertial forces of 2700-plus rotations per minute. For this test, we gathered tires rated to sustain 168 mph or higher (which means at least a W speed rating). Though we didn’t test that certified durability classification, we did focus on the way these nine radials manage the lateral and longitudinal forces generated on a track or a great stretch of road.
The tires, all size 225/45R-17, hail from the summer-performance category, specifically the max- and extreme-performance subsets. Max-performance tires shift the balance of wet and dry performance that is baked into ultra-high-performance (UHP) summer tires toward the dry, with less optimization for ride and noise. Extreme-performance tires go a step further: They offer the best dry-road performance available for the street. A rainy day won’t sideline a car on extremes, but as a group they are not designed around comfort requirements such as ride and noise.
Unlike our previous examination of summer-performance rubber, we didn’t put a cap on price, though none of these tires costs more than $200. We could not test every tire in the max and extreme categories, so we started with tires we knew had good performance from our experience with them on road cars. From there, we added a few aftermarket-only fitments. The tires in this test—four extreme-performance, five max-performance—range in price from $133 to $199.
Once again, we partnered with Tire Rack and used its South Bend, Indiana, shop and test track as our base of operations. Its staff is our kin. Every employee is genuinely into cars and, not surprisingly, tires.
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</TD></TR><TR class=bglight><TD vAlign=top>KEEP YOUR FRIENDS CLOSE: We’ve called upon the services of Spencer Geswein for our last three tire tests. He’s a racer and a former Michelin tire engineer. While at Michelin, Geswein developed tires for Ford and for the Dodge Viper. He is currently working on big engines—70 liters and up—for Caterpillar mining trucks. What shocks us is how quickly he gets up to speed and the supreme consistency of his lap times. Plus, he provides clear, concise notes. Geswein’s contributions are a major part of our tire-testing expertise.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Tire Rack’s product-information specialist, Woody Rogers, loaned us two test cars (E92 BMW 328i coupes). After the tires were broken in—a critical process that removes oils coating new tires—we performed wet and dry braking (50-to-0-mph) and skidpad (200-foot-diameter) tests.
We measured skidpad grip according to our usual procedure, averaging our best counterclockwise and clockwise laps. Braking distance was the average of five stops from 50 mph. Unlike in our normal tests, where we report the second-best stop from 70 mph as a measure of total vehicle performance, the average of five stops from 50 mph shifts the focus to the performance of the tires themselves.
Following those objective tests, we gathered impressions and lap times by driving Tire Rack’s autocross dry and wet. A sprinkler system spewing 300 gallons per minute onto the 0.33-mile course provided the irrigation required.
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</TD></TR><TR class=bglight><TD vAlign=top>The E92 BMW 328i’s front-engine, rear-drive layout and its hydraulic power steering with precise feedback make it an ideal platform for testing tires.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>We also conducted five-mile public-road tests to take sound-level measurements and evaluate the tires’ subtle differences in ride quality. How these factors varied among the tires—and how they were considered in the final results—was small yet significant.
To keep the test as scientifically sound as possible when collecting objective data and making subjective judgments, we ran a reference tire (a UHP all-season Pirelli) at the beginning, end, and two times in the middle of each test to ensure that conditions didn’t significantly change during the day. Plus we had two sets of each tire: one for wet testing, the other for dry—all mounted on identical wheels.
Spencer Geswein contributed his tire knowledge and driving ability, as well as his objectivity. Geswein insisted on doing the test blind, and we followed suit. The tires were tagged with arbitrary letters. We’re accustomed to checking the tire as we get into a car, so to not examine the rubber when we jumped in the BMW 328i test cars required the self-denial of a monk. Rogers held the answer key, not revealing the tires’ identities until the conclusion of all the testing. We wound up with a clear favorite in wet conditions, a favorite in dry conditions, and three days worth of test data to sort through. Continued...
<NAV class=mod>PHOTOS (25)
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