by Kim Crosser on Sat Jan 19, 2013 12:34 pm
Concur with the starting pressures. I always recommend running the pressures as stated on the driver's door panel or in the manual as a start point, then adjusting.
One key point is that different tires and different weather conditions often require significantly different tire pressures. At an AX, the tires are going to be cold for the first run of each session, and will cool down between runs. If the weather is cold, you might need more pressure to get and keep more heat in the tires, while if it is 100 degrees in August, you might want lower pressures to avoid overheating.
If you are serious about getting the last hundredths (or maybe tenths) of seconds, you should check your pressures with a contact pyrometer after every lap and ensure you have relatively even heating across the full width of the contact surface (i.e., three points across every tire in the grooves). If the center temp is higher than the outsides, you have too much pressure. If the outer temps are higher than the center, then you have not enough pressure. If you have a temperature "slope" (e.g., high temp on outside, middle temp in center, low temp on inside, or vice-versa), then you may need to correct the wheel alignment.
This all assumes you are already driving smoothly and consistently. Until you get to that point, tire temps/pressures aren't going to make much difference.
One obvious thing to look at. If you find your times get worse lap after lap, and it isn't due to driving mistakes, you may have too much pressure and the tires are slipping more as they heat up and the contact patch is shrinking. You can take out a couple of pounds of pressure and may find your times get more consistent.
For a DE/TT event with continuous lapping, it is especially important not to have too much pressure at the start, as there is no cool-down between laps, and your tires can wind up with a LOT more pressure than at an AX.
2012 Panamera 4
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