Closing the book on this story for now with this final installment. The 245/40-18 R1s worked great this past weekend at Danville. We ended up settling on a 5psi pressure stagger, lower in rear, and the car was working pretty good. I ended up PAX'ing 3rd which is the closest I've ever been to Jim and David, and if I could have actually not over-driven those cross-runway transitions repeatedly, I could have closed the gap a bit more. On my last run I almost did them right (best of the day) and then barely clipped a cone at the final gate, tripping the lights at a 40.483. Hence the best time clean was 40.776 raw. I think it might be time to at least get a set of Konis for this car -- it still has the stock shocks, and I think I can get some additional performance from adjustable Konis, even SAs.
Jackie PAX'd 15th with a 42.334 raw which she wasn't too happy with; however, being only ~1.6 seconds back from my time is about the best she's driven so far. I think she's doing well learning how to horse 3400 lbs around an autox course.
Tire wear after 22 runs (both of us for both days) was nil. Outside edge wear up front is where most occurs (and where A6s cord after 25 runs or so on this car), and it was not bad at all. These R1s are really the ticket for heavy camber challenged cars at the club autocross level...at least for me. I'm not interested in buying A6s for $274 each, three or more times per year.
A number of people were asking me about the tires this weekend, so I'll recap this thread with a couple of comments:
- The 245 R1 is wide as I mentioned up above. It is close to 260mm wide in section width. Hence, be prepared if you order R1s for them to come wide, perhaps even much wider than you expect.
- They wear very well -- much, MUCH better than a Hoosier.
- They work great on this heavy 330i (empty car weighs about 3370 lbs then add my 200 lbs), and they really do not need spraying. I can't say how a 245 section R1 would work on a much lighter weight car though.
- They communicate well through the wheel and seat, at least in the 330i which has outstanding steering. Where the A6 felt dead, the R1 feels alive and ready through the wheel. You know what the contact patch is doing, and the response over the top of the tractive force curve is not to dramatically lose grip. It doesn't trail off like a street tire, far from it, but it doesn't drop off a cliff like the A6 either. In addition, it makes just a bit of squeaking when you are asking too much from it.
I'll end with a pic of Jackie entering the first sweeper carrying the RF tire in the air. I think we've got enough front roll stiffness and the R1 seems to be sticking pretty well.
