Comment by algas
2 years ago
That first result re: tires is simply wrong. Wider tires don't have a larger contact patch; the size of the contact patch is determined by the weight of the car and the air pressure in the tires:
A = W / P
So the reason wider tires improve handling is more complex and subtle. Also, FTA:
Assuming a baseline of a moderately wide tire for the wheel size.
- Scaling both of these to make both wider than the OEM tire (but still running a setup that fits in the car without serious modifications) generally gives better dry braking and better lap times.
- In wet conditions, wider setups often have better braking distances (though this depends a lot on the specific setup) and better lap times, but also aquaplane at lower speeds.
- Just increasing the wheel width and using the same tire generally gives you better lap times, within reason.
- Just increasing the tire width and leaving wheel width fixed generally results in worse lap times.
A full accounting of the effects of changing tire width should explain all of these effects.
So, why is it?
Such a nerd snipe this one. 400+ comments and still could not get the answer.
As a partial explanation, maybe it's not the case that area = weight/tire pressure as an absolute rule? In which case we get back to the layman knowledge of "wider tires have a greater contact area."
As an extreme example, run flats at atmospheric tire pressure don't drastically change their area.
https://web.archive.org/web/20090327161537/http://performanc...
From https://www.6speedonline.com/forums/996-turbo-gt2/242759-imp...