Graham Jagger wrote:
I'm curious if that is still true today Dick. Many of the street tires used today for autocross have sidewalls stiffer than the r-comps you used years back.
Maybe the older tires with lower pressure rolled too much and would impact your cornering force. Todays Azenis, MX, F1 SC, or entry level r-comps like the R2 or RA1 have really stiff sidewalls. So a little less air in the rear on a RWD drive car might get it to get better traction without killing cornering speed.
For autox I ran 2-5lbs less in the rear to get grip. On track I'm at least 2lbs lower in the rear.
Graham,
You may be right. Even though the tires I used to run at 50 psi had STEEL in the sidewalls (Michelin XWX's) they also were 70's series on a 5.5 inch rim. Other tires I used were also relatively high profile compared to the 45 to 35 series modern tires on wider rims. A lot of the benefit of high pressures was grip (as measured on skid pads) but for a stock class car the improved steering response tended to compensate for the soft suspension.
FYI I was running 45 psi fronts and 35 psi rears on "normal" street tires in F Stock (245/45X17 Firestone Wide Ovals on 8 inch rims). I chose the high front pressure to prevent roll over on my daily driver full tread tires and, I hoped, to improve the response and maybe the grip. The balance was slight understeer (to be expected with a Mustang) but since I had no test time and knew there was more time in the driver than could be found with tire pressures I kept the car the same for each run. A look at the results will show that the driver learned a little on each run. Final PAX (compared to stock TIR times) indicates grip was at least decent.