I just installed Hoosiers on my car, and I've heard there is a specific "break-in" to be followed in order to get the best out of the tires. Anyone know what that is exactly? Thanks.
I just installed Hoosiers on my car, and I've heard there is a specific "break-in" to be followed in order to get the best out of the tires. Anyone know what that is exactly? Thanks.
I just installed Hoosiers on my car, and I've heard there is a specific "break-in" to be followed in order to get the best out of the tires. Anyone know what that is exactly? Thanks.
No shaving needed for the R6 Hoosiers. Molded to 4.5. Order them heat cycled & go have fun!
Ed
http://www.hoosiertire.com
No shaving needed for the R6 Hoosiers. Molded to 4.5. Order them heat cycled & go have fun!
Ed
http://www.hoosiertire.com
Always been my practice to heat cycle the old fashioned way - on the race track.
Leo M. of Goodyear was a speaker at a racecar preparation symposium I attended a couple of years ago. His comments, on the oven method of heat cycling, was pretty straight forward. Oven cycling the tires was fine for the wear surface but did little to the rest of the tire. Beads, belting layers and sidewall layers need the physical heat cycling and stretching that only comes from having them on a car on the track. Acceleration, braking and braking are all needed to properly heat cycle and brake-in race tires.
At least from tire rack, they do not use an oven. They put the tire on a roller thingy, causing sidewall and tread deflection, simulating on-car conditions.
http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tiretech/techpage.jsp?techid=66
Is it worth $15? dunno.