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~SlideWays~ wrote:I do wonder if part of the problem (not including being a dick in the wrong place) could be those horrible tyres that mag shops put on those cheapy 'drift wheel' combo deals.
I recently bought a turbo S14 200sx which is the NZ version with 20kw's less than the Japanese version. Even though it has an LSD and 225's on the back they are horrible horrible tyres in the wet (Vensus or something?). I drove it home in the rain the other day and it stepped out as soon as the turbo spooled at 2500rpm with about 30% throttle. Easy to handle but I'm getting new tyres before the girlfriend drives it in the wet.
I guess my point is that tyres really do make a huge difference in the wet.
Again, not making excuses for guy.
tsoob wrote:Most of the time when its cheapest tyres its not the salesman, but more the customer and his tight ar*e attitiude. (no offence intended here)
tsoob wrote:~SlideWays~ wrote:I do wonder if part of the problem (not including being a dick in the wrong place) could be those horrible tyres that mag shops put on those cheapy 'drift wheel' combo deals.
I recently bought a turbo S14 200sx which is the NZ version with 20kw's less than the Japanese version. Even though it has an LSD and 225's on the back they are horrible horrible tyres in the wet (Vensus or something?). I drove it home in the rain the other day and it stepped out as soon as the turbo spooled at 2500rpm with about 30% throttle. Easy to handle but I'm getting new tyres before the girlfriend drives it in the wet.
I guess my point is that tyres really do make a huge difference in the wet.
Again, not making excuses for guy.
Hey i can't say for other shops, BUT if you have delt with me you will know that my first and foremost choice for tyres is always a preimum branded tyre. (toyo mostly)
Last week i sold a set of "drift wheels" we put toyo t1r on them.
Most of the time when its cheapest tyres its not the salesman, but more the customer and his tight ar*e attitiude. (no offence intended here)
tsoob wrote:~SlideWays~ wrote:I do wonder if part of the problem (not including being a dick in the wrong place) could be those horrible tyres that mag shops put on those cheapy 'drift wheel' combo deals.
I recently bought a turbo S14 200sx which is the NZ version with 20kw's less than the Japanese version. Even though it has an LSD and 225's on the back they are horrible horrible tyres in the wet (Vensus or something?). I drove it home in the rain the other day and it stepped out as soon as the turbo spooled at 2500rpm with about 30% throttle. Easy to handle but I'm getting new tyres before the girlfriend drives it in the wet.
I guess my point is that tyres really do make a huge difference in the wet.
Again, not making excuses for guy.
Hey i can't say for other shops, BUT if you have delt with me you will know that my first and foremost choice for tyres is always a preimum branded tyre. (toyo mostly)
Last week i sold a set of "drift wheels" we put toyo t1r on them.
Most of the time when its cheapest tyres its not the salesman, but more the customer and his tight ar*e attitiude. (no offence intended here)
shihad wrote:my mates brother has spec s silvia its manuel he reckons it would beat standard da tegs so not particular slow at all.it also doesnt have a lsd factory.
S T E A L T H wrote:shihad wrote:my mates brother has spec s silvia its manuel he reckons it would beat standard da tegs so not particular slow at all.it also doesnt have a lsd factory.
a dog with 3 legs can beat a standard DA teg.
the point is you can slide/drift/crash ANYTHING, if you really try (and most 17 year olds will). If theyre taught some basic car control skills (in real life, not by watching D1NZ videos) the chances of carnage will be substantially reduced
eskimo wrote:True true. I think NZ needs to adopt the licencing system from Finland..the more you can teach a kid about car control / limits the better.
Al wrote:eskimo wrote:True true. I think NZ needs to adopt the licencing system from Finland..the more you can teach a kid about car control / limits the better.
The three E's. Enforcement. Engineering and Education.
Enforcement doesn't work that well, because for as long as I've been driving the cops have become tougher and tougher and there is still plenty of muppets running stop signs, red lights as well as killing people.
The country can't/won't afford to engineer the roading better because of the huge burden we have called the welfare system.
Education is the only one remaining, like eskimo has said, teach people how to actually drive, not just to pass the test. However call me cynical but the flow on effect from making it tougher to drive is less revenue in the form of fuel tax, gst on fuel, registration costs and so on because the number of drivers would drop.
Elmo wrote:cogent wrote:
It's not a power issue You can lose control of anything with enough lack of attention. Which sounds like exactly what happened here with an influence of not driving to the conditions.
True, but with more power its MUCH easier to lose control on corners and in the wet etc
Mr Revhead wrote:Way too many factors involved to say that....
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