gt4 factory tires = continental?
#1
gt4 factory tires = continental?
Anyone take delivery of their GT4 with continentals on it? at 6:20 in this video the guy says it comes with continentals, and you can see it does have them on it.
#3
No it's either the Pilot Sport Cup 2s or the Dunlop Sport Maxxxxxx Race 2 from the factory for the GT4, at least through 2021 models.
That particular GT4 is basically a used GT4 with 450-some miles (or is it 4500-some miles???) that is on one of those scammy raffle websites:
https://www.dreamgiveaway.com/dg/porsche
The site says "Tires provided by Continental" for pretty much every raffle car available, including the GT4. So maybe they are obligated to put Continentals on all the cars because they are a site sponsor or something.
That particular GT4 is basically a used GT4 with 450-some miles (or is it 4500-some miles???) that is on one of those scammy raffle websites:
https://www.dreamgiveaway.com/dg/porsche
The site says "Tires provided by Continental" for pretty much every raffle car available, including the GT4. So maybe they are obligated to put Continentals on all the cars because they are a site sponsor or something.
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#5
Mine came with the Dunlop Racemaxx 2 and after 4 trackdays the front tires started to delaminate quite severely, as can be seen from photos attached. When I complained to Goodyear they sent out their field rep and eventually did not offer me any discounts on replacement saying that I had gotten the 4 track days' use. This is the first time I've experienced this type of wear as all other brands have never delaminated like these. Needless to say I will not be replacing them with Dunlop RaceMaxx2 or any other tires made by Goodyear. I chose to go with the Continental Extreme Contact Sport Plus as the replacement and so far have great results. In addition to being almost as good as the Cup2 in the dry they are superior in the wet and are about 2lbs lighter in total weight of all 4 tires compared to the Cup 2s.
#6
Mine came with the Dunlop Racemaxx 2 and after 4 trackdays the front tires started to delaminate quite severely, as can be seen from photos attached. When I complained to Goodyear they sent out their field rep and eventually did not offer me any discounts on replacement saying that I had gotten the 4 track days' use. This is the first time I've experienced this type of wear as all other brands have never delaminated like these. Needless to say I will not be replacing them with Dunlop RaceMaxx2 or any other tires made by Goodyear. I chose to go with the Continental Extreme Contact Sport Plus as the replacement and so far have great results. In addition to being almost as good as the Cup2 in the dry they are superior in the wet and are about 2lbs lighter in total weight of all 4 tires compared to the Cup 2s.
I bet the Conti's would look worse after less track days with the same setup.
#7
The car was running on factory settings as delivered to me last September. I drove to and from all tracks which were in this case Thunderbolt at NJMP in Millville, NJ. I have always driven the cars with factory delivered street specs and have never tried track alignment settings (for more camber etc). I am a BMWCCA, PCA, HOD driving instructor/coach and have always driven on street-legal/competition tires. So far I've been happy running the Pirelli Corsa, Sport Cup, and Continental tires, As far as suspension tuning for increased track performance I'm not willing to trade streetability for more responsive track performance as I am doing DE and not really racing for the best laptime. Also the basis for tuning should always start with a baseline setting which in this case is stock. So I venture to guess that the contis will hold out better than those RaceMaxx and I'll report back after 3 days at Watkins Glen in July later.
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#8
The car was running on factory settings as delivered to me last September. I drove to and from all tracks which were in this case Thunderbolt at NJMP in Millville, NJ. I have always driven the cars with factory delivered street specs and have never tried track alignment settings (for more camber etc). I am a BMWCCA, PCA, HOD driving instructor/coach and have always driven on street-legal/competition tires. So far I've been happy running the Pirelli Corsa, Sport Cup, and Continental tires, As far as suspension tuning for increased track performance I'm not willing to trade streetability for more responsive track performance as I am doing DE and not really racing for the best laptime. Also the basis for tuning should always start with a baseline setting which in this case is stock. So I venture to guess that the contis will hold out better than those RaceMaxx and I'll report back after 3 days at Watkins Glen in July later.
2) And what car(s) were all those street legal competition tires on? Were they on verified OEM settings?
3) As an instructor for all those organizations you should know better about track tire usage!
4) All of the above.
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daaa nope (06-22-2021)
#10
That tire look overheated, not rolling the edge but the outside is more worn than the inside. doesn't look like it has excessive treadblock wear on one side vs the other side. probably weren't overdriving them too hard because it didn't roll over the edge hard but i'm guessing too high of psi + over driving them a bit + lack of camber that all combined to put too much heat into the outside edge and overheated it. I'm guessing this is on a track with a lot of left hand turns several of which are fast sweepers and the other tire is not not as bad?
I have a RE71R i murdered. rubber detatched from the nylon on the outside. inside tread is like brand new. tread block in middle is worn down to the bottom of the valley on the outside edge but almost brand new on the inside edge. Ran them at 31psi cold which is higher than what they normally like (28 seems to be decent for me) and was doing a lot of edge of adhesive sliding with a factory alignment on track with mid corner bumps... on a track that is like a cheese grater right now for tire wear. I've never done that to a bridgestone before but I blamed my driving for it. I wonder if bridgestone would have covered it... that tire got 2 track days only.
I have a RE71R i murdered. rubber detatched from the nylon on the outside. inside tread is like brand new. tread block in middle is worn down to the bottom of the valley on the outside edge but almost brand new on the inside edge. Ran them at 31psi cold which is higher than what they normally like (28 seems to be decent for me) and was doing a lot of edge of adhesive sliding with a factory alignment on track with mid corner bumps... on a track that is like a cheese grater right now for tire wear. I've never done that to a bridgestone before but I blamed my driving for it. I wonder if bridgestone would have covered it... that tire got 2 track days only.
Last edited by Zhao; 06-22-2021 at 01:47 AM.
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nova996 (08-13-2021)
#11
Fortunately, your car has more negative camber available to it—all you need to do is have the OEM suspension components better adjusted for the track. Within what the OEM components allow you aren't going to get to any settings that destroy the streetability of the car (assuming you don't do something wild with the toe). Most folks can get around -1.6° of camber at the rear, and depending on your preference, you can run -1.8° to -2.1° of camber at the front by maxing-out the adjustment at the top of the strut tower and adding shims to your lower control arms. Stick to the stock toe settings and these mild camber settings aren't going to do anything negative to your streetability, but they'll definitely help even out your tire wear.
Thanks for being an instructor with so many groups!
#12
Zhao is totally correct in his assessment of the tires being overheated. Being that I took it to the track at 600 miles (street break-in) and being mindful of the get acquainted period I wasn't putting the car through a severe test of its limits.I drove the car on November 7,8 last year at Thunderbolt starting at 29psi front and 33 psi rears (standard street tire cold specs) and there were no issues. Then the next 2 days were in March of this year and still no issues. It was only in April with BMWCCA that on the 5th track day that I noticed the tire pressures were over 41 psi (normally the fronts should be at 34 and rears at 36 when hot) and saw the delamination in photos posted. Others who ran the 981 GT4 have also suggested getting more neg. camber (1.75 deg front and 2.5 rears) to get better more even wear. My personal philosophy when it comes to changing from OEM settings on Porsche GT cars is the factory engineers deliver a product meant for the owner's intended use. These GT# cars are meant to be driven to and from the tracks and provide a high performance experience that's comparable to a dedicated track/race car with the comforts of A/C and suspension (PASM) settings. Those that want to turn the street optimized settings to track /race car have the means to adjust the suspension and ATRB on these GT# cars to their liking.
#13
Well after 2 full track days at NJMP Lightning (12x 25 min sessions) and 2 full track days at Watkins Glen the new set of Continental Extreme Contact Sport Plus tires that replaced the Dunlop Racemax2 have held up extremely well with even wear all around. The PCCB brake pads still have 60-70% of original pad lining left and I am about to go back to the Glen for another 2 full track days next week with HOD. So the Dunlops were ruined from overinflation and the street alighnment settings or my driving was not the cause for delamination of the front tires after 5 track days.
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HelpMeHelpU (07-20-2023)
#14
I have always run the OEM alignment settings on all the cars I track (2010 GT3 and 2020 718 GT4) using Porsche N0 or N1 tires along with the Continentals Extreme contact Sport (which were the least expensive and most durable option). Those tires have never exhibited the kind of overheating and delamination seen with the Dunlop Racemax2 front tires. I have also always worn the tires down to the chords before replacement.
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HelpMeHelpU (07-20-2023)
#15
I don't expect any of my tires to last 4 track days going 8/10ths or harder. Extreme wear seems reasonable and not something the manufacturer should have to pay you for after 4 days. When we track our cars we're putting an insane level of stress on suspension and motor components. I've seen plenty of tires get to the steel belts during a single track day, not because the tire was garbage but because some people drift, get into wonky slides, etc. Although we should expect the tire to handle the speeds their wear ratings advertise, there is no guarantee as to how long a tire will last in a track day situation. I know NASA does 4 or 5 x 20 minute sessions per day down here. Expect a ton of wear! Also may want more negative camber up front for the track. I personally run at least -2 to -2.5 at the front for track days.