
Just to add my twopenneth to the debate.






Bob
Moderators: IMOC Moderators, IMOC Committee Members
Poohbear wrote:Hya,
Just to add my twopenneth to the debate.Has anyone noticed how the tyres fitted to F1 cars have an aspect ratio of approx 50%.
You cant tell me that F1 teams dont know what they are talking about.
Seems to me that Toyota got the tyre wheel combination ie: 15 inch with 55/50% aspect ratio pretty spot on.
Bob
Alex_Dunn wrote:if its true smaller wheels give better handling why do ferraris and porsches have such big rims?
jonno wrote:Alex_Dunn wrote:if its true smaller wheels give better handling why do ferraris and porsches have such big rims?
Have you read ANY of this thread?
Speedy wrote:jonno wrote:Alex_Dunn wrote:if its true smaller wheels give better handling why do ferraris and porsches have such big rims?
Have you read ANY of this thread?
Indeed..
.
.
Cars handle best on the wheels and profile tyres they were designed for and that the suspension geometry can cope with.Go back to page 1 and start again from the top!
BenF wrote:NOT the right answer
.
.
.
people have spent a lot of time posting to threads like this
- do them the courtesy of reading their posts before posting like this
tonigmr2 wrote:Fear me, for I am watching
looking at touring cars for example, you see many commonly available hatchbacks/saloons racing using larger wheels than stock, and not all teh teams run in classes where the entire setup is reworked
indeed- you see a wide range of alloy wheel sizes available across the range from the showroom and I doubt very much that they make much effort to change the suspension setups.
So how do we know for sure that every package is designed to be the optimum
- and if not, just what is?
Given that we accept a Boxter runs MacPherson struts and happily runs very well on 18's, is it not fair to assume that an MR2 with some additional suspension development*could* run better on larger than stock sizes?
If all it comes down to is the ability of the car at 10/10ths to remain pointed where it needs to be, is it more down to driver skill or the car setup?
I guess what I'm saying is, given a choice of any off the shelf components currently available, could an MR2 be set up that would be faster with 18's than it could be with 15's? I don't for one minute assume it would be a nicer driving experience, but simply that it might be faster? And in turn, just how much copst would we be talking to get to that point..
.
What did the TRD or SARD MR2 racers use given a racing team budget to set them up?
tonigmr2 wrote:Fear me, for I am watching
matt_bakermk1 wrote:Hi Ryan,
That was kind of exactly why I made the comment- what Toyota saw fit as the ultimate result of all that expensive initial R&D wasn't actually the best setup.
So when people say that xyz manufacturer spent all that money getting the best possible package isn't necessarily fact.
It's more appropriate to say its the best cost compromise within any given design brief
- they'll ultimately be working to a budget
- and large wheels, more expensive suspension, bigger brakes etc etc doesn't always figure in the budget allowance.
Thus a car is launched with wheels smaller than what could be potentially the best possible set up.
This is all very much speculation- and it may be that the MR2 really is at it's best on 15's, but give Toyota another 2-3 grand on the retail price of the MR2
(reasonable given what we often spend on wheels,tyres and suspension compenents in the course of modifying) and ask them to do the work again now and I wonder if it would still have 15's?