

Certainly, when I originally hinted at 17 wheels all-round with same-width tyres, I was told in no uncertain terms that:



Now following this I started looking into this statement, and more importantly, how this opinion may have originated .


After all, we are simply disagreeing about essentially an extra couple of square centimeters of rear tyre contact with the road ?
Given that there are almost limitless combinations of tyre size, compounds, road conditions, vehicle speed, etc, it seems the statement is somewhat misleading .


What has probably happened is that someone has had an


Now when this is mentioned people have jumped to conclusions and assumed that it MUST be down to the tyres .






Someone else loses it on a corner:


So it is incomprehensible that PERHAPS they were driving a little too fast, did not show the required respect for a mid-engined car, had a binding brake caliper, hit a patch of wet leaves


Now I appreciate that the stagger will obviously have SOME effect on handling, but there are a LOT of other more significant variables:
Binding brakes, tyre profile, tyre tread depth, tyre wear across the tread, suspension wear, etc .

And this is just on a standard car !

If you then consider that any mods will also affect the handling: engine conversions, uprating suspension, adding ARBs, aero enhancements, different size alloys, uprated brakes

Having driven MR2s for a decade now, I DO agree with one thing: you need to learn to drive a mid-engined car .

I can understand people warning newcomers about the POSSIBLE danger of mixed tyres, stagger, alloy size, etc.


Take a typical example:
A guy has always fancied an MR2 Roadster



Looks on Autotrader, finds a nice MR at the right price, buys it, drives it home.


Now its very likely the alloys are blistered, so he looks online for a nice new set of rims: 17 package deal from Halfords for

Buys them, sorted .



Monday morning, takes car for a blat on some



SO what caused the crash?


More than likely, it was because he was trying to drive it like his Golf, and HAD NOT GOT THE HANG OF THE CARS HANDLING!

Sorry Ive talked this through with several very good engineers and its a fact:

LACK OF TYRE STAGGER WILL NOT CAUSE YOU TO END UP IN A DITCH!

Driving like a t**t, speeding in a car you are not familiar with on unfamiliar roads WILL, on the other hand.


Basically the sensible approach is this: buy the wheels



Then take it easy, until you know the handling learn the car.



By all means experiment with different tyres




Maybe they were worried that people driving MR cars for the first time would be


This is not to say that it makes it dangerous, though, surely.



This IS a can of worms: volumes have been written on car handling .



But the fact remains that there are simply too many variables all contributing to the overall picture, and it is simply misleading to scare newcomers to the Mk3 .


I dont remember any similar dramas when I first got my Mk1: people run all sorts of different wheels





Now I wonder why that is.



