zossy1 wrote:220s are too wide for a 7 inch rim. You need at least 8s to run those.
You could try the Kumho 205s which are also a bit cheaper, or buy some 8's (which might actually be cheaper than new slicks!).
I'm with zossy1 on this one. I think they might be too wide also for a 7inch rim. The guy at Dunlop did say it is within spec but that may be more a sales pitch than anything. He did tell me that it would wear the outside part of the tyre which it is. Surprising considering I'm running
-4 degrees camber. Anyone know why this is or is it because of what zossy1 said in his other post.
zossy1 wrote:MattR wrote:220's will be fine on a 7" rim if that's what the Dunlop sold you knowing the rim width.
I respectfully disagree... A tyre that wide, especially at a 580 profile (which is what I'm sure these must be), will just work the sidewalls to buggery. The car will wallow all over the place as the wheels work back and forth inside the wide tyre carcass. IMHO, even 8's are only barely wide enough to secure the sidewalls of the 220 properly.
Remember that a 7 inch rim is only 175mm wide at the bead.
I'll grant you, that may have something to do with my driving style though, coming from karts.
Boyracer wrote:I always ran the 220 slicks on 7 inch rims with no problems.
28 hot sounds a bit high, I used to start at 19 or 20 cold.
This is the reason I don't buy slicks any more, the first lap you do on them is the fastest and it's downhill from there, usually about 10-15 heat cycles loses about 2 seconds, I didn't ever wear out a set, they always just ended up being really slow.
We had a set of Kumho slicks that were good for one day, the next day the car was undriveable.
If you get a set of new slicks that are a bit old they will be crap.
Just get yourself some Yoko 050 semi slicks.
Lou my car is so difficult to hang on to without p/s when I run 19psi. I've even been told to start with 18psi but how do I reach my goal of 28 degrees hot which was the figure given to me by Dunlop. Having shelled out $1500 for a new set of tyres a month ago will make it difficult to cure this problem with a new set of Yoko 050. This is why I'm persisting with all the questions.
To work the tyre harder and get it to bead, do I need more or less tyre pressure?