TT tyre question

Author
Discussion

macdeb

Original Poster:

8,510 posts

255 months

Friday 28th July 2017
quotequote all
So, we have a 2010 TT tdi which I have to say is a great car. It's used as our daily driver and needs some tyres. I am leaning towards Uniroyal Rainsports as I fitted them to my other car and was impressed (573 hp TVR) and were better than previous 'Falkens' and 'Bridgestones' Has anyone else gone this route?

dc2rr07

1,238 posts

231 months

Friday 28th July 2017
quotequote all
Not had any of what you are looking at but have Michelin Pilot Sport 3 on ours and would highly recommend them, not cheap though smile

Edited by dc2rr07 on Saturday 29th July 17:37

Lucas Ayde

3,557 posts

168 months

Sunday 30th July 2017
quotequote all
When I had a Mk2 TT I tried Pilot Sport 3 and was highly disappointed - expensive, noisy, poor mpg, average dry grip but they did have superb wet grip.

My fave tyres on the TT were Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 2. Fantastic dry grip, quiet, good mpg and a lot cheaper than the PS3. Not quite as good wet grip but still very good. They have now been superseded by the Asymmetric 3 which I would assume is even better.

Currently running Michelin PS4 on my Golf R and they are amazing - best tyres I've ever had. Bags of grip in wet and dry, really confidence inspiring, reasonably quiet and reasonable mpg. Also, not that more expensive than the competition.

dc2rr07

1,238 posts

231 months

Sunday 30th July 2017
quotequote all
First time I have seen good mpg mentioned on pistonheads biglaugh

purenrg

125 posts

188 months

Tuesday 1st August 2017
quotequote all
I have recently bought a tts roadster and the tyres fitted are kumho and there's plenty of grip in them wet and dry. My other car is an slk32amg and I have fitted rainsport tyres and I am really impressed, I would recommend as I prefer them to the p zeros I have been running.

SuperchargedVR6

3,138 posts

220 months

Friday 4th August 2017
quotequote all
I'm seeing thriftiness being the over-riding factor here. Rainsports on a 600hp RWD car is madness. I bet you don't go anywhere near the edge of the car's grip. Rainsports are not a sports tyre, contrary to it's name. They have ridiculously soft sidewalls which squidge and squeal way too easily and their wet performance is average these days.

Pilot Sport 4s should be mandatory minimum requirement on anything with sporting pretentions.

2017 and people still skimp on tyres. If you're a hypermiler and break out in a sweat over a 1mpg decrease (and lets be honest, most diesel owners do), then fine, cheap out on your tyres. If you drive with any kind of vigor and enthusiasm, fit something decent.




cuprabob

14,614 posts

214 months

Friday 4th August 2017
quotequote all
SuperchargedVR6 said:
I'm seeing thriftiness being the over-riding factor here. Rainsports on a 600hp RWD car is madness. I bet you don't go anywhere near the edge of the car's grip. Rainsports are not a sports tyre, contrary to it's name. They have ridiculously soft sidewalls which squidge and squeal way too easily and their wet performance is average these days.

Pilot Sport 4s should be mandatory minimum requirement on anything with sporting pretentions.

2017 and people still skimp on tyres. If you're a hypermiler and break out in a sweat over a 1mpg decrease (and lets be honest, most diesel owners do), then fine, cheap out on your tyres. If you drive with any kind of vigor and enthusiasm, fit something decent.

It always surprises me how many "enthusiasts" spend a fortune on wheels and coilovers and then negate it all ny fitting ditchfinders.

xjay1337

15,966 posts

118 months

Friday 4th August 2017
quotequote all
Pilot sport 4

Rainsport 3 are crap in comparison in any condition, and last half as long. Total false economy.

Lucas Ayde

3,557 posts

168 months

Friday 4th August 2017
quotequote all
cuprabob said:
It always surprises me how many "enthusiasts" spend a fortune on wheels and coilovers and then negate it all ny fitting ditchfinders.
Totally agree - tyres are the interface between road and car so if you are at all concerned about performance, handling and safety, no point scrimping on them.

People will spend amazing amounts of money on (often crappy) modifications to their cars and then buy the cheapest tyres possible to 'economise'.

Belle427

8,951 posts

233 months

Friday 4th August 2017
quotequote all
I've had the Goodyear eagles as well on 2 cars (not a tt)and have been very impressed with them.

purenrg

125 posts

188 months

Thursday 10th August 2017
quotequote all
Ha ha
Cheers for your opinions on the tyres
That makes me stingy and having crap tyres
Can I say in my defense
It could be something to do with they way we all drive.
The faults described I have not experienced
I suppose that makes me a crap driver too
Lighten up chaps

I'll get me coat