Will 19" Wheels fit on the 991 GT3?
#31
Whoa, that's very surprising. I wasn't planning on hooters b/c they aren't street friendly (driving to track, don't want to trailer) and b/c there are reported durability issues on rear engined 911's. But stick has never been a criticism of hooters. Interesting
#32
We had the same experience with the Trofeo R on the 458 as well. Sucked cold and took a long time to get hot. Once hot they seemed to do well. We were running 2.2 negative in the front and I think 2.4 in the rear. It would make sense that going to Hoosiers would necessitate more negative camber on the GT3. Have you looked into increasing camber. The more complicated these cars get, the harder they become to dial in. To many moving variables.
What size Hoosiers did you end up with in the end? What width wheels did Alan build. I may have missed it.
Mike
What size Hoosiers did you end up with in the end? What width wheels did Alan build. I may have missed it.
Mike
#33
I’ve actually driven R6’s extensively on the street and hundreds of km’s to/from tracks many times and never had an issue. I once drove 200km to a track when it was 0 degrees Celsius (yes, very slowly) and at the track the next day, where it was 5 degrees, the tires had lots of grip (after a couple of laps) and they were still 2+ seconds faster than the same car (997 Turbo) on the old MPSC’s on a hot day. Often, if I had 2 track weekends in a row I would just leave the Hooters on and daily drive the car all week on them. City streets, highways, no issues ever. I have several friends who do the same (and have been for years) and honestly none of us have had problems. Don’t get me wrong, I wouldn’t recommend running them 100% of the time on the street as they don’t perform well with street levels of heat, they are apparently more prone to punctures, and you will have to drive at/below the speed limit on your best behavior if it even sprinkles rain, but I won’t hesitate to drive them hundreds of miles to/from tracks IF they perform like they did on my 997. Est8esq’s reports are throwing a wrench in my plan though because as good as the GT3 is, I do miss the lateral G’s and face-melting braking of the R6 (and they are brilliant at adding that extra front grip needed to rid 911’s of understeer in the tight stuff). But I will be pissed if I buy a set of 19’s to run them and they don’t perform like they did on my 997.
#34
Rennlist Member
Had the car out to its first local SCCA autoX, Forgeline 19" wheels with A6s 265/325. My run group was first out in the early morning, no heat or rubber on the course, so was not expecting a lot of grip. The car held like glue, hooked on turns, it was like having the power of my Turbo with the handling of the Cayman S. Quick turn-in, a little oversteer but not bad. Pulled the wheels off after the event, no rubbing anywhere. As wonderful as the car is on stock tires, the A6s took the car up another notch. What a blast to drive!
#39
Rennlist Member
Any photos of the wheels stationary? Thanks.
#40
Had the car out to its first local SCCA autoX, Forgeline 19" wheels with A6s 265/325. My run group was first out in the early morning, no heat or rubber on the course, so was not expecting a lot of grip. The car held like glue, hooked on turns, it was like having the power of my Turbo with the handling of the Cayman S. Quick turn-in, a little oversteer but not bad. Pulled the wheels off after the event, no rubbing anywhere. As wonderful as the car is on stock tires, the A6s took the car up another notch. What a blast to drive!
thanks,
Jerry
#43
Rennlist Member
I've purchased at lest 12 sets of wheels from Forgeline and have never had a problem. Can't beat the service.
#44