FWIW. For those experimenting with track tire sizes, here is a Yokohama data point. I went to the new Podium Club @ Attesa track (Casa Grande, AZ) this weekend and tried Yokohama A60s - the same tire Cable has been running on his 9L during Global Time Attack. 320/650X18 front, 330/710/18 rear. The 320s on front run wide and were the same width as the 335 A7s I had been running, and they were 1" taller than the factory Kumhos. I was running 2* negative camber and 7* caster, with the ride heights at 4"f and 5.5" rear. I also was light on front shock compression, and heavy on rebound. Got my eyes watered! Under hard braking the fronts would rub hard in the top inside of the wheel tub at the front. - so hard that it would cause a little side-to-side shimmy. Worse than that, with the nose down (heavy braking with lots of rebound stiffness) I could not turn without the inside edge of the tire hitting a protrusion in the front of the wheel tub (see photos). Cable got by with this because he had already worn big holes in the tubs - LOL. So, I couldn't brake and I couldn't turn, but the IATs were low and the car hauled like a banshee on the straights. I ran a few laps with light braking early and accelerated into the apexes to pick the nose up and minimize the binding, but that wasn't the quickest way around the track so I packed up. You could run these tires (they have great grip) with a little higher (maybe an inch) ride height, more compression stiffness, perhaps a different bump stop configuration on the shock, and holes in the wheel tubs - probably not worth it.
Viper Yoko rub 9.jpg
Viper Yoko rub 4.jpg
Viper Yoko rub 7.jpg
Viper Yoko rub 8.jpg
Bookmarks