01-06-2018 | #11 | |
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Clayton, North Carolina
Posts: 1,133
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Re: Tire Service Life
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Thanks Bob. I only drive it less than 400 miles per year and maybe attend a charity lap event at VIR. The VIR event is the most concerning, because of the high speed cornering and top speeds of 150 mph on the straights. A tire failure could be very damaging to the car and me. At almost 70 years old, I’m not the same driver I was 50 Years Ago. Thanks again. Sent from my iPhone using ZR-1 Net Registry
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Lou[COLOR="Red"][B][SIZE="4"][/SIZE][/B][/COLOR] |
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01-06-2018 | #12 | |
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Clayton, North Carolina
Posts: 1,133
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Re: Tire Service Life
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Thanks for your advice. The date stamps are XX12’s (too cold in the garage to check the month ☃️). I agree with what you’re saying. You want optimal performance when you need it, otherwise I’d be calling Hagerty for my Insurance claim. Lou Sent from my iPhone using ZR-1 Net Registry
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Lou[COLOR="Red"][B][SIZE="4"][/SIZE][/B][/COLOR] |
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01-06-2018 | #13 |
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Jupiter, Fl.
Posts: 815
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Re: Tire Service Life
Note that these Toyos are V rated, which are good to 149 mph. W and Y are the top end tires. Y are rated to 186mph which would theoretically be the most appropriate tires for the ZR-1.
At 73, my top-end days are over. An occasional squirt to the 150 is all I dare. So it’s the Toyos for me. Sent from my iPhone using ZR-1 Net Registry
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"It's about the car, not the people." 1991 ZR-1 White/Black #1236 (Owner since 1994). Stock engine with bolt-ons: Hurst shifter,"Forced Air" intake, Coplon duct, Bee Cool Radiator, Demon coils, Jeal prom, Watson headers, X pipe, 3" B&B's, Rippie flywheel, 4:10 gears, A molds, Toyo Proxes-R888's 12.06@117mph. 1.76 60ft. |
01-06-2018 | #14 |
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Liverpool, NY
Posts: 35
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Re: Tire Service Life
I have a '91 with 25k ms and original tires! I don't drive the car had, except maybe once in a while, but did decide to purchase new tires just recently. The originals still have good tread on them so what I plan on doing is to purchase a set of 5-spoke Z wheels and save the original tires and wheels, for whatever. I replaced the original exhaust a few years ago and still have that hangin' around...for whatever. Anyway, I'm lookin' forward to this Spring and cruisin' with the new "shoes", aaannd feeling more secure in doing so.
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01-06-2018 | #15 |
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Toronto
Posts: 545
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Re: Tire Service Life
If you are even remotely thinking of putting that car on a track, I would absolutely replace the tires. Even if you are not driving at racing speeds there are a lot of tire stressors on a race track.
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01-06-2018 | #16 |
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Clayton, North Carolina
Posts: 1,133
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Re: Tire Service Life
Thanks everyone, you can’t take it with you, so get new tires... time to go shopping online while it’s cold outside ☃️❄️!
Sent from my iPhone using ZR-1 Net Registry
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Lou[COLOR="Red"][B][SIZE="4"][/SIZE][/B][/COLOR] |
01-06-2018 | #17 | |
Join Date: Jan 2017
Location: NJ
Posts: 71
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Re: Tire Service Life
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Dave Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk |
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01-06-2018 | #18 |
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Mullica Hill, New Jersey
Posts: 2,592
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Re: Tire Service Life
Yes,
Replace the tires. Marty |
01-06-2018 | #19 | |
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Squires (near Ava MO in the Mark Twain N'tl Forest) - Missouri
Posts: 6,493
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Re: Tire Service Life
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In my experience with the GY D3s AND the Nitto 555/555r, at and certainly beyond 5 seasons they start acting like the temperature was near freezing. They often break loose w/o coming close to "standing on it" in first gear, and getting a little "sketchy" when going through some "S" curves or the occasional on-ramp. Last season while driving the twisties during the Mountain Run, I felt the ABS kick in when going into a few turns. Course, it could have been a lot of things too. But, this "feeling" I've noticed now on 3 sets of tires at about the same number of seasons for the way I've driven on them. Time for new rubber! I've had great luck with the Nitto 555/555r combo. At the last pizza night, Bob Gillig was saying that he found the Nitto NT01s would really stick well on his 427 LT5 ZR-1. (And, when Bob talks...people listen.) Ami's ZR-1 has the Nitto G2s on the front which seem to cleave water better than the 555s, FWIW. (A new set w/ road hazard is just at/about $1K at Discount Tire, including road force balancing, and free balance and rotation.) I seldom drag race - preferring the twisties for most of my driving. And, I really hate driving in the rain with the 555/555r combo - pretty "squirrely" above 45-50 mph in moderate to heavy rain, I find. However, I've followed Robert DeMarco's car which had the 555 G2s in both moderate to heavy rain, AND through the twisties. And, if you know Robert's driving style in the mountains, he ain't shy about laying into the corners! He spoke well of those tires, last we spoke. Bottom line - it all depends on how the car is to be driven whether or not to change them on account of their age. If they aren't sticking as well as you'd expect, regardless of age, a different tire may be needed.
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Good carz, good food, good friendz = the best of timez! 90 #1202 "FBI" top end ported & relieved Cam timing by "Pete the Greek" Sans secondaries Chip & dyno tuning by Haibeck Automotive SW headers, X-pipe, MF muffs Former Secretary, ZR-1 Net Registry |
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