Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I just purchased some rims that came with new Falken RT 615 semi comps in soft compound on the rear. I was intending them to be circuit rubber but I was also going to make my way down to Calder soon and was wondering how they would go as a drag tire... specifically what psi should I have in them and how long do I need to smoke them for to get the right amount of heat?

I know they are a relatively new tire so nobody may have specific experience with them but any comments/advice would be appreciated. :huh:

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/124435-falken-semi-comps-as-a-drag-tire/
Share on other sites

circuit tyres dont work at all well as drag tyres.

The sidewalls are hard, and have no flex.

You'd be better off on the street tyres, using 20-24psi in them which will give more traction that a hard walled semi that wont have much play at all.

RT215 / RT615's are a street tyre not a semi, but have a stiffer sidewall than most road tyres. Their treadwear rating is 180-200.

Semi slick 'R' compound tyres eg Bridgestone RE55s, Toyo RA888, Yoko A032R are 60-80 treadwear.

The Falkens should grip better than most street tyres though.

Edited by VHR32

Whilst I'm no drag racer, I have absolutely no doubt that semis will hook up better than your regular road tyres. My experiences on both (Bridgestones verus Azeni RT215 255/40/17) is that the car is all over the road on the bridgestones, and much more composed on the semis.

Only problem is you don't get an awful lot of KM out of them :)

haha geez thanks for all agreeing guys... something to think about I guess... in answer to VHR32 they are definately an 'R' compound semi race tire but yes they have a treadwear rating of 200 which makes them the most streetable of the semis but also I would imagine slower ona track compared to RE55s etc... but thats why I am using them daily rather than keeping them in the shed (I only drive like 2kms to work and back)...

if anyone is interested they are lovely to drive on the street with, nice and quiet, great in the wet, they also tramline less than other tires I have had... only downside so far is they are worse in choppy side streets as they don't soak up the bumps as well but an okay trade off when you go round a corner and they don't try and roll onto the tires shoulder blah blah... anyway I am very happy, might even take a regular tired set to Calder and do a back to back comparison

There is nothing R compound about a tyre with a treadwear rating of 200! Falken have long been producing tyres that look like R compound tyres but aren't. A proper set of R coumpounds are night and day by comparison to the Falkens.

I have driven on Azenis RT215, Hankook Z2000, Yokohama A032R, Brigestone RE55S, Toyo RA01. The Azenis are not a true R compound tyre. They are only a marginal improvement over a normal street tyre. There is no real improvement in outright grip levels, but they are much more responsive and consistent due to the sidewall construction and larger treadblocks.

but if you want a tyes for the drags, why not get ones designed for that?

yes you are right harry. I think people above are confusing a 'semi slick' with an R-compound (aka S-tyre). the falkens are most certainly a semi-slick. ie they have a semi slick style tread pattern which is completely different to a conventional road tyre. they also have stiff, square sidewalls. however they are not made from an R-compound rubber.

I didn't get them for drags I got them as an everday/circuit tire... mate has been wanting to go to Calder recently and I was wondering if I should leave them on or trash and old set...

as for outright grip levels I would have to agree they are only marginally better than the Michelin Pilot sports (best tire I have had on to compare with) but as you have stated the feel and sidewall make for a much more predictable drive... I should really reserve judgement tho, as I haven't pushed them on a track yet

yes you are right harry. I think people above are confusing a 'semi slick' with an R-compound (aka S-tyre). the falkens are most certainly a semi-slick. ie they have a semi slick style tread pattern which is completely different to a conventional road tyre. they also have stiff, square sidewalls. however they are not made from an R-compound rubber.

ah okay, I will cease to refer to them as R compound :nyaanyaa:

personally, I wouldn't even call them semi slicks. People use the terms semi slick, R compound, etc interchangably when referring to soft compound competition tyres. Semi slick is about more than the tread pattern to most people - its about a tyre halfway between a street tyre and a slick, and that's more than just a flash race looking tread pattern - its about how they perform.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Check the injectors flow evenly, and are actually flowing what you and the ECU think they should be flowing. If it's starting up on starter fluid, you have a fuel issue. Is it possible under cranking your fuel pump is turning off?   The harness you replaced, is that the whole engine harness? Do yourself a test, and drop the old harness on and plug it into the Z32 ECU. It's possible they've wired things different. From memory S1 to S2 is different in RB25 and you may have a wrong loom
    • I haven’t pulled the injectors to watch them spray yet but they are clicking from the cas and all of the spark plugs are wet with fuel. I’ve thought the cylinders were being flooded from the beginning and was hoping fuel pressure would fix it. Tonight I am going to pull the rail and watch the injectors spray. Don’t know how to test/diagnose if the plugs are firing in correct sequence but that should be a timing thing and as far as timing goes my car still has the half moon for the cas can only install it 1 way. And my mechanical timing is 100% correct I posted photos above. Confirmed with the balancer on and off. 
    • I checked spark on all cylinders and they all visually have spark with the plug pulled and grounded, but plug 1 is the only one that fouled. This was a running swap that blew up and was rebuilt by a machine shop, put a new wiring specialties harness and did all gaskets, studs, and bolts while it was out.  compression is 135-150 across all cylinders. Aside from that from my understanding with the z32 ecu and maf the car should start regardless. The wiring for TPS and the dual 02 sensor/ dual knock sensor stuff shouldn’t actually stop the car from starting or even running well, (just slightly rich)  they just give fault codes. Car supposedly is supposed to start as long as you have z32 afm and ecu with the nistune base map and that’s info coming from a well known and trusted tuner who does a lot with SR/RB (Rsenthalpy). After more trouble shooting today where I’m at right now is that the cas is sending signal to the injectors they click while spinning the rotor, Fuel pressure is now set at 43psi, all cylinders have good compression and all of the plugs looked great (just wet with fuel) except for cylinder 1 which was very black (cylinder 1 has 150psi compression). all of the coils generate spark if pulled out and grounded out on the head. On the fuel pump car just pops into the exhaust. On starting fluid car will fire off. Hard to tell if all cylinders are firing off but definitley a couple. sounds like all of them but it’s only for 3-5 seconds hard to tell. 
    • Final update!!! Got the front bar fitted and sprayed and all sorted now. My cutouts worked great and the indicators aren’t just falling off. 😂  
×
×
  • Create New...