So i have been tracking for a little while now and want to know what is the natural progression as far as tires go. I have been using exclusively the Firestone Firehawk tire for 5 years. It is a great cheap summer tire that has served me well on the track. I saw cheap as in it used to be cheap but now is $880 a set which is $120 away from knocking on continentals door and $220 from Michelins.
I have progressed further than that tire can take me. I can turn them into greaseballs within a couple laps and on a hot day at the track the last two sessions I basically have to chill all the way out as the tire gives up. I have heard street tires do not heat cycle but that is not my experience. They seem to lose all their grip long before the tread is gone.
I plan to upgrade and need some advice. I hear track tires are best for track but they do not have that nice, slow transition from grip to slip like street tires. I am still learning so I feel maybe jumping straight into track tires is a bad idea. I do not want to ball up my car at the track as I financially cannot just buy a new one right now. This is the only one I have. I do also have a RSX type S but that is my GFs DD at the moment.
The street tire I would go with is the Michelin PS4S. I feel this is the next natural upgrade on track for me. I could be wrong. I hear these have progressive breakaway but have also heard some stories of them chunking on heavier cars. I track a modified 2007 350Z. I have the correct suspension and alignment specs to track it so I do not know if the chunking issue is just for heavy cars with the incorrect alignment. These tires are $1350 a set
My other choice is the Goodyeard Eagle F1 Supercar 3. I have seen these a couple times on cars at the track and yikes can those guys go fast on these gumballs. It is 220 TW and OEM on a lot of factory muscle cars built for track use. How much more is this tire going to bite me in the butt when I make a mistake on track?
I have found regular summer tires to be good all the way down to about 35 degrees when its dry out. Will a 220 TW tires be able to do that or will it need to be only driven above 50F? I know the ideal is to buy a track set of wheels and tires but I live in little apartment in Chicago and am running out of space. I do have a little garage but most of my storage is taken up with my A/S tires. I may get rid of that set as I do not drive the car in winter.
I am open to any other tire suggestions or suggestions of any kind. I feel like I do pretty well on my 340TW tires considering I can sometimes pass people on 200TW tires that have cars with way more power than mine. I also feel there is a lot more for me to learn and do not want to jump straight into slicks or something as I do not feel like I will learn as much that way. I have seen many people make that mistake.