Uniroyal Rainsport 5
Discussion
I know this has been done to death, I thought I’d done all the research so went out a bought a set of Rainsport 5’s…now I’ve done about 150 miles in them now but they really done feel that great, very soft and not as good as the old Toyos. I’m running 22psi front and 24 rear.
So…
Do I need to run them in some more….are my expectations too high.
Should I increase the pressures to compensate for the softness?
Thoughts?
So…
Do I need to run them in some more….are my expectations too high.
Should I increase the pressures to compensate for the softness?
Thoughts?
What size are the new tyres.
I know the RS tyres are known to be good using larger wheels such as 17’s etc.
They are a winter tyre so very soft. Car moves around more but should offer better hold to the tarmac, more compliance.
Takes a bit of getting used to and does take usually 100 miles or so to bed them in.
Give them a few weeks and they might harden very slightly through heat cycles.
I’d try small increases in tyre pressure keeping to the same front to rear offset we have always used so 22f 24r as standard.
32 sounds far to hard as older style tyres would perform very badly on a TVR at those pressures.
I’d be very systematic and use the same piece of road to test its effects.
An emergency stop being my first testing point of reference
I know the RS tyres are known to be good using larger wheels such as 17’s etc.
They are a winter tyre so very soft. Car moves around more but should offer better hold to the tarmac, more compliance.
Takes a bit of getting used to and does take usually 100 miles or so to bed them in.
Give them a few weeks and they might harden very slightly through heat cycles.
I’d try small increases in tyre pressure keeping to the same front to rear offset we have always used so 22f 24r as standard.
32 sounds far to hard as older style tyres would perform very badly on a TVR at those pressures.
I’d be very systematic and use the same piece of road to test its effects.
An emergency stop being my first testing point of reference

I pumped the tyres (RS3) on Tamy up to 40psi while she was parked up. Didn't loose any pressure which was a good sign. I forgot to lower them when I drove up to the TVR Tickler in Downham Market last month. It was an interesting experience 
Back to 24psi all round (225/40 on each corner). Much better.

Back to 24psi all round (225/40 on each corner). Much better.

Not a great choice of tyre for a sports car, unless you're a a 'Sunday trundler'. A wet weather tyre like the Rainsport has extra tread depth and lots of channels to displace water, great for the rain, but in the dry the tread/channels deform under cornering and gives squidgy steering/cornering response.
Sorry for jumping in to a TVR chat. I have RS5 on a Fiesta Van 205/45/17. They are a soft wall tyre that brings some extra comfort and is very good in the wet and cold/wet. The trade off is they are not as sharp in cornering than others used to date Michelin/Yokohama used over the previous 84k miles the van is now on 115k. They suit me for the use I have but there are better tyres out there for not much more if you are looking for a sharper turn in. I will most likely buy again as at the price point for me they are hard to beat.
I am not a trundeler, nor a fine weather only driver. I have 215/45/R17 & 245/40/R17 rainsport running at 24psi.
They are a great all round tyre. The problems i have come across on other cars is not the tyres but the suspension.
Give the rainsports a few more miles & check your suspension. Otherwise take a hit & go back to Toyos.
They are a great all round tyre. The problems i have come across on other cars is not the tyres but the suspension.
Give the rainsports a few more miles & check your suspension. Otherwise take a hit & go back to Toyos.

FWIW I run RS6's front 22 rear 24 and find them excellent in all weather's.
Most significantly I have real top end shocks (Intrax) and fully adjusted and corner weighted.
A famous LeMan driver drove my car, for a TV motoring feature, a few years back on RS5's then and said it handled great
Most significantly I have real top end shocks (Intrax) and fully adjusted and corner weighted.
A famous LeMan driver drove my car, for a TV motoring feature, a few years back on RS5's then and said it handled great
I have RS5s on my Chimaera. 16s front, 17s rear. One section down from standard but same widths. I'm running standard pressures of 22F 24R. They replaced some very old Toyos. As has been mentioned above, it does take a while for the release agent to wear off.
Even once run in, you can feel that they have an even softer side wall than the Toyos. They're definitely not as precise and my car wanders a bit on the motorway. However, they grip really well both in the dry and especially in the wet. Having had a few 'moments' with the Toyos, even when they were a lot newer, I know which I'd rather have for most of my driving.
But if you're looking for the ultimate in feel and precision, you'd be better off with a different tyre. But I don't know which one!
Even once run in, you can feel that they have an even softer side wall than the Toyos. They're definitely not as precise and my car wanders a bit on the motorway. However, they grip really well both in the dry and especially in the wet. Having had a few 'moments' with the Toyos, even when they were a lot newer, I know which I'd rather have for most of my driving.
But if you're looking for the ultimate in feel and precision, you'd be better off with a different tyre. But I don't know which one!
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