Michelin Pilot Super Sport
#1
Michelin Pilot Super Sport
Yesterday I took my car on the track with new Michelin Pilot Super Sport (MPSS) tires. What a difference! I am now firmly convinced that Pirelli Zero are not right for this car. I will go as far as suggesting anyone doing spirited driving to ditch Pirellis regardless of thread life and switch right away.
Impressions of Pirellis on the track:
1. Get greasy when too hot, this forces frequent pit stops to cool tires.
2. Don't provide enough grip at the back tires, with tail-happy car like F-type that is very noticeable. With MT, I lost traction going into THIRD gear with full throttle application.
Pros: Already there
Impressions of MPSS on the track:
1. Rear grip is solid, only from stop is it ever a concern
2. Can handle heat about at the same rate as brakes, twice as many laps as Pirelli are possible.
3. Easier to punch out at apex, as you a lot less likely to induce a drift
Cons: MPSS don't telegraph adhesion limit and can surprise you if you get carried away.
Impressions of Pirellis on the track:
1. Get greasy when too hot, this forces frequent pit stops to cool tires.
2. Don't provide enough grip at the back tires, with tail-happy car like F-type that is very noticeable. With MT, I lost traction going into THIRD gear with full throttle application.
Pros: Already there
Impressions of MPSS on the track:
1. Rear grip is solid, only from stop is it ever a concern
2. Can handle heat about at the same rate as brakes, twice as many laps as Pirelli are possible.
3. Easier to punch out at apex, as you a lot less likely to induce a drift
Cons: MPSS don't telegraph adhesion limit and can surprise you if you get carried away.
The following 7 users liked this post by SinF:
allenman85 (05-07-2016),
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JgaXkr (08-05-2016),
Mulmur (05-07-2016),
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and 2 others liked this post.
#3
#4
#6
Lawrence.
#7
Thank you LMS for the feedback. I will be completely swapping out the interior stereo system to drown out any road noise. For those really peaceful days, just turn the radio off the back mountain roads and listen to that beautiful exhaust sound (Snap, Crackle, Pop).. LOL
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#8
I'm contemplating a track weekend (NASA HPDE at Sonoma) coming up soon, but would probably have to run the P-Zeros. I don't think I can find time to get them replaced before then. Oh, and the cost. Yeah, that too. I can't really justify replacing them with so much life left. Some serious abuse might be what they need.
#9
I agree; I just put PSS's on Friday(700 mi on the Pirellis). Noisier but better handling. The noise surprises me and other MIchelins on previous cars have always been quieter than OEM tires of any brand.
Larry
#10
I'm planning to replace my tyres in about a month/six weeks, and as the consensus through multiple threads here and on other forums is to go with the Michelin PSS that is what I will order.
Normally I just read the sizes from the existing tyres and order the same sizes, but I'm not happy with the low rim protection on the factory Pirelli tyres so I have a quick question for those who swapped to the PSS ones.
If you have the stock sizes of 255/35/20 front and 295/30/20 rear, do the PSS offer any rim protection? I'm talking about a buffer for creeping-speed alignment errors, not taking a 5mph crunch which I doubt any tyre would protect. i.e. something that will give feedback before it scrapes the alloy. I have the diamond cut forged storm wheels and found that one rear rim can't be recut because of some kerbing damage, so I would rather sacrifice a £250 tyre than a £750 wheel if that happens again.
I have read lots of forum posts on the interwebs written by very intelligent people who know all about tyres. Most of it goes over my head. I am someone whose tyre knowledge consists of a) they are round, and b) they are usually black. With that in mind, is there any advantage to going for 265/35/20 front and 305/30/20 rear to gain a little extra over the rim edges? The PSS seem to have rounder corners than the PZeros.
I don't track the car at all, although it does see a bit of sidewards force every few weekends. I don't want to negatively change the handling of the car but I don't mind a bit of increased road noise as long as it is not excessive.
Lastly, the same version of PSS doesn't seem to be available in both front and rear sizes. I see K1, K2 for the front and MO and BMW versions available in the rear sizes. Prices are almost identical. Is there a preference as to which to select, and does it matter having different versions fitted?
Thank you!
Normally I just read the sizes from the existing tyres and order the same sizes, but I'm not happy with the low rim protection on the factory Pirelli tyres so I have a quick question for those who swapped to the PSS ones.
If you have the stock sizes of 255/35/20 front and 295/30/20 rear, do the PSS offer any rim protection? I'm talking about a buffer for creeping-speed alignment errors, not taking a 5mph crunch which I doubt any tyre would protect. i.e. something that will give feedback before it scrapes the alloy. I have the diamond cut forged storm wheels and found that one rear rim can't be recut because of some kerbing damage, so I would rather sacrifice a £250 tyre than a £750 wheel if that happens again.
I have read lots of forum posts on the interwebs written by very intelligent people who know all about tyres. Most of it goes over my head. I am someone whose tyre knowledge consists of a) they are round, and b) they are usually black. With that in mind, is there any advantage to going for 265/35/20 front and 305/30/20 rear to gain a little extra over the rim edges? The PSS seem to have rounder corners than the PZeros.
I don't track the car at all, although it does see a bit of sidewards force every few weekends. I don't want to negatively change the handling of the car but I don't mind a bit of increased road noise as long as it is not excessive.
Lastly, the same version of PSS doesn't seem to be available in both front and rear sizes. I see K1, K2 for the front and MO and BMW versions available in the rear sizes. Prices are almost identical. Is there a preference as to which to select, and does it matter having different versions fitted?
Thank you!
#11
#13
I just ordered PSS's (and plan to have a last "fling" on the P-Zero's when they arrive). For anyone that's interested, I'm getting them from Costco. The rear tires don't show up on their on-line system, but the store can get them and they have the machinery to handle the size. (When I went in to ask about the size availability, the guy at the counter immediately asked "Is this for that F-Type out in the lot? Don't worry, we'll take care of it.")
Costco's price was good and includes installation and road hazard. Also, there is currently a $70 rebate.
Front (2) $579.98
Back (2) $ 771.50
TPMS (4) $ 11.96
Sales Tax: $102.26
Total: $1,465.70
Rebate: $- 70.00
Costco's price was good and includes installation and road hazard. Also, there is currently a $70 rebate.
Front (2) $579.98
Back (2) $ 771.50
TPMS (4) $ 11.96
Sales Tax: $102.26
Total: $1,465.70
Rebate: $- 70.00
#14
Question to those who are commenting the PSS's are noisier, what tire size did you purchase? OEM stock size or other?
I up-sized to 305ZR/30/20 on the rear and kept the front at OEM spec and this set up is definitely a lot quieter, a smoother ride when cruising, and far better bite in performance mode.
I would wag the tail often without trying and chirp tires on nearly every shift with the crappy PZoos. Now with the PSS, the back end rarely breaks loose unless I really try and tire spin is almost impossible except in launch from a dead stop.
I up-sized to 305ZR/30/20 on the rear and kept the front at OEM spec and this set up is definitely a lot quieter, a smoother ride when cruising, and far better bite in performance mode.
I would wag the tail often without trying and chirp tires on nearly every shift with the crappy PZoos. Now with the PSS, the back end rarely breaks loose unless I really try and tire spin is almost impossible except in launch from a dead stop.
Last edited by IronMike; 05-08-2016 at 02:49 PM.
#15
I'm planning to replace my tyres in about a month/six weeks, and as the consensus through multiple threads here and on other forums is to go with the Michelin PSS that is what I will order.
Normally I just read the sizes from the existing tyres and order the same sizes, but I'm not happy with the low rim protection on the factory Pirelli tyres so I have a quick question for those who swapped to the PSS ones.
If you have the stock sizes of 255/35/20 front and 295/30/20 rear, do the PSS offer any rim protection? I'm talking about a buffer for creeping-speed alignment errors, not taking a 5mph crunch which I doubt any tyre would protect. i.e. something that will give feedback before it scrapes the alloy. I have the diamond cut forged storm wheels and found that one rear rim can't be recut because of some kerbing damage, so I would rather sacrifice a £250 tyre than a £750 wheel if that happens again.
I have read lots of forum posts on the interwebs written by very intelligent people who know all about tyres. Most of it goes over my head. I am someone whose tyre knowledge consists of a) they are round, and b) they are usually black. With that in mind, is there any advantage to going for 265/35/20 front and 305/30/20 rear to gain a little extra over the rim edges? The PSS seem to have rounder corners than the PZeros.
Thank you!
Normally I just read the sizes from the existing tyres and order the same sizes, but I'm not happy with the low rim protection on the factory Pirelli tyres so I have a quick question for those who swapped to the PSS ones.
If you have the stock sizes of 255/35/20 front and 295/30/20 rear, do the PSS offer any rim protection? I'm talking about a buffer for creeping-speed alignment errors, not taking a 5mph crunch which I doubt any tyre would protect. i.e. something that will give feedback before it scrapes the alloy. I have the diamond cut forged storm wheels and found that one rear rim can't be recut because of some kerbing damage, so I would rather sacrifice a £250 tyre than a £750 wheel if that happens again.
I have read lots of forum posts on the interwebs written by very intelligent people who know all about tyres. Most of it goes over my head. I am someone whose tyre knowledge consists of a) they are round, and b) they are usually black. With that in mind, is there any advantage to going for 265/35/20 front and 305/30/20 rear to gain a little extra over the rim edges? The PSS seem to have rounder corners than the PZeros.
Thank you!
With 305's on the rear, the tire beads over the rim by a solid 10 - 12mm.
One would have to smack a curb pretty hard to damage the rim.
Since I maintained OEM spec on the front, the bead is half that shown on the rear, but still better protection than stock tires.
The following 3 users liked this post by IronMike:
#16
One of the first things I noticed with the PSS's mounted. I too had a minor brush of a curb and was surprised how little protection the PZoos provided.
With 305's on the rear, the tire beads over the rim by a solid 10 - 12mm.
One would have to smack a curb pretty hard to damage the rim.
Since I maintained OEM spec on the front, the bead is half that shown on the rear, but still better protection than stock tires.
With 305's on the rear, the tire beads over the rim by a solid 10 - 12mm.
One would have to smack a curb pretty hard to damage the rim.
Since I maintained OEM spec on the front, the bead is half that shown on the rear, but still better protection than stock tires.
Do you notice any handling difference with the wider rear tire?
Lawrence
#18
Around a tight 90-degree intersection corner, it was getting dangerously comical how easily the zeros would get loose, and the sideways slide would begin, unless I drove like grandpa. On the Michelins, I can definitely get back into the throttle much sooner.
The best way to summarize the difference; the F-Type feels like it was bred, engineered and tuned to run on PSS tires. The PZeros were a fricken joke.
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Mulmur (05-08-2016)
#19
Personally, I do not think that MPSS are loud, I certainly don't hear them when driving top down or up. YMMV.
For installing these, I highly recommend doing it at a shop that has dynamic balancer (e.g. Road Force). My Jag dealer has one, so I did it through them.
If anyone is concerned, IronMike's picture is somewhat misleading. Sure, lip is there but you can't see it unless you are as close as he was when that picture was taken.
For installing these, I highly recommend doing it at a shop that has dynamic balancer (e.g. Road Force). My Jag dealer has one, so I did it through them.
If anyone is concerned, IronMike's picture is somewhat misleading. Sure, lip is there but you can't see it unless you are as close as he was when that picture was taken.
Last edited by SinF; 05-08-2016 at 04:26 PM.
The following 2 users liked this post by SinF:
Panthro (01-20-2017),
Uncle Fishbits (08-11-2016)
#20