Tire test: Hoosier R7 vs. Goodyear Eagle RS vs. Yokohama Advan A055

Andy
By Andy Hollis
Nov 11, 2024 | Tire Test, Hoosier, Goodyear, Yokohama, R-comp, Goodyear Eagle RS, Hoosier R7, Yokohama Advan A055 | Posted in Features | Never miss an article

Photography Credit: dgillenphoto.com

Not for highway use. It’s a common disclaimer found printed on the sidewalls of many tires intended for the track. And that’s despite carrying a U.S. Department of Transportation approval for street use. 

How is this possible? In short, these are full racing slicks at heart, with just enough street characteristics built back in to meet the DOT’s regs. 

That makes them compliant for various motorsports programs, but don’t expect any favors from them if they encounter wet conditions or road hazards on the street. If you trailer your vehicle to the track, though, these tires are a one-way ticket to consistently fast lap times. Welcome to the sticky world of R-comps.

While most current tires in this category look, drive and wear in a similar fashion, how they got to this point is a fascinating story of rules dodges, special tires for special people, and eventual consensus on where lines should be drawn–based largely on what was policeable. 

The basic premise that got us here: Street cars should race on street tires, not the special racing slicks found on purpose-built race cars. So, of course, tire manufacturers had to push the limit on what constituted a street tire. 

Yokohama fired the first shot in this tire war with the release of its A001R in 1981. The company laid a soft, sticky compound over its A001, a high-performance street tire already in the lineup. 

These tires were eventually replaced by the A008 and A008R–again, one for street, one for competition. When these track-ready, street-legal tires started cleaning house in autocross and showroom stock road racing, that R-compound moniker stuck.

As other tire makers responded–win on Sunday, sell on Monday, right?–performance escalated quickly. But there was a cost: street manners and longevity. These race tires weren’t for everyone, though, and in some cases, buyers had to be “on the list” or sign a waiver.

Rule makers tried to respond but found it difficult to restrict motivated manufacturers. In the end, they drew the line at “DOT approved,” a minimum tread pattern, and equal availability to all competitors. 

Meet the Latest Crop

From left to right: Hoosier R7, Goodyear Eagle RS, Yokohama Advan A055. Photography Credit: Andy Hollis

Our motivation for this test was Yokohama’s announcement of a new offering in this category, the Advan A055. And while the company’s previous efforts followed its traditional street tire-based formula, the new release is a minimalist, no-holds-barred, DOT-approved race tire. Exciting stuff. Initial shipments have reached our shores in only seven sizes, but an expanded lineup is on the way.

We wanted to compare the new Advan to the Goodyear Eagle RS, a capable tire we used on our recently retired C5 Corvette track car project. Goodyear has a long history in this category, being one of the first responders to Yokohama back in the ’80s with its Eagle VR50S–available only to racers but in four different compounds.

Which brings us to the reigning champ, Hoosier. As a race tire manufacturer exclusively, Hoosier’s original entry into this realm was different than the others: a sticky, bias-ply race tire topped with a tread pattern. This Street T.D. was fast–like, really fast. An even stickier version, called the Autocrosser, followed.

Hoosier moved to a radial design with its A3S01 in 2000. Every few years, it has revised that formula. Today, Hoosier’s R-comp offerings are available in both road race and autocross compounds, with the names simply shortened to R7 and A7.

We narrowed the available sizes to one size–205/50R15–that would fit one of our test vehicles, this time our One Lap CRX. The car is still in its NASA TT4 configuration, so figure 200 average wheel horsepower. 

Photography Credit: Andy Hollis

We mounted the tires on 15x9-inch front and 15x8-inch rear 6UL wheels by 949 Racing for this car’s usual staggered fitment. Each set was treated to a four-lap heat cycle and then allowed to cool for 24 hours before testing. 

On test day at Texas’ Harris Hill Raceway, we fitted up an older, scrubbed set of Hoosiers for a couple of practice sessions and track cleanup. Once the track conditions were stabilized, we started the comparisons.

Yokohama Advan A055

  • best lap: 1:22.6
  • tread width: 7.6 in.
  • weight: 18 lbs.
  • $292

All our tires wore the same size designation, but the Yokohamas were the narrowest of the group–almost half an inch less tread width than the others. The Yokohamas would have been right at home on 8-inch-wide wheels, but for consistency we kept the 9-inch wheels up front. 

Once on track, we were delighted at the first turn of the wheel: This tire wants to dance! It’s super responsive and eager to dive into an apex. In fact, it took a couple of laps to dial in our hand movements. 

Full grip was available almost immediately, but we continued to find time through lap four. Recovery was a bit lazy when the tire was overdriven mid-corner, and it was a little less adept at combined loading than the Hoosier–but still quite good. Its smaller size likely contributed to this overloading. 

Goodyear Eagle RS

  • best lap: 1:23.5
  • tread width: 8 in.
  • weight: 18.5 lbs.
  • $245

The Eagle RS is styled a lot like the Hoosier, with a fairly square profile and minimalist tread pattern. It also seems a bit bigger than its markings indicate. 

Once on track, though, the similarities end. Mid-corner grip was down relative to the other two tires and, like the Yokohama, recovery from beyond the limit was slow. Further, the Goodyear did not like to multi-task, so trail braking was a challenge and full acceleration off the corner had to wait until the wheel was almost straight. That said, longitudinal grip was exceptional, providing excellent forward bite and straight-line braking. 

The RS turned on almost immediately, with its quickest lap being the first. Thereafter, it was super consistent across the entire session.

Hoosier R7

  • best lap: 1:21.7
  • tread width: 8 in.
  • weight: 17 lbs.
  • $322

The Hoosier R7 is the standard by which all other R-comps are measured. Every aspect of this tire is designed for consistently high performance on the track. 

Its compound takes a lap or two to fully activate, but then it stays that way lap after lap. The carcass is very light, which aids acceleration and braking due to reduced rotational mass. 

The tire also runs wide relative to its marked dimensions, which can be an advantage when rules regulate tire size. Our 205mm tires were as wide as some brands’ 225s.

On track, the Hoosier delivered as promised. Maximum grip was available by lap two, and we nailed four laps all within a tenth. Turn-in response was predictable but a little numb. If the Yokohama is a scalpel, the Hoosier is a big, grippy hammer. 

Combined loading was a standout, enabling strong trail braking and early corner exit power-up. Breakaway at the limit was very manageable, and recovery was quick.

Yokohama Advan A055 (retest)

  • best lap: 1:22.5

For our final session, we headed back out on our Yokohamas. Had the track conditions and driving remained consistent?

Familiar now with the tire’s lively turn-in characteristics, we nailed our quickest lap on the second circuit–a tenth better than our first session’s fastest lap. Later analysis showed that we hadn’t harnessed the tire’s full potential, as there were another two-tenths to be had by combining the best bits of our fastest laps from the two sessions.

Track Results

For sure, Hoosier’s relentless development has delivered an excellent combination of drivability, performance, consistency and longevity. The R7 wears its crown well.

Yokohama’s new entry is promising. The steering response is incredible, and grip is immediate and plentiful. The downsides we noted were possibly due to its undersized nature relative to the other tires. Right now, this is the only 15-inch size in the lineup.

However, this might help those who are limited by NASA’s tire templates, which go by actual tire width and not marked sizing. And the Yokohama’s surgical precision makes it a great candidate for autocross.

The Goodyear is a conundrum. It’s quick and consistent, but not quite at the same level as the others. In particular, it struggled to handle the multi-tasking needs of our nose-heavy, front-drive car. By contrast, it worked well on our nicely balanced Corvette and has been successful on larger, rear-drive cars in SCCA competition. 

Again there are choices, and again the tires keep getting faster. 

Let Your Usage Be Your Guide

We’ve assembled this chart to be a quick reference to choose the proper tire for the proper venue. For GRM’s updated tire guide and past tire tests, visit grassrootsmotorsports.com/tireguide.

  • Autocross: Choose A or AA for warmup and B or better for time trial pace.
  • Time trials: Choose by time trial pace and wear.
  • Lapping days: Choose by heat tolerance and wear.
  • Street and track: Choose by heat tolerance, wear and wet performance.

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Comments
Nockenwelle
Nockenwelle New Reader
9/26/22 11:14 a.m.

Thanks for another great tire test Andy! The A055 seems very appealing for me, running an E30 in TT5 on 15x8" wheels with history on R7s. It's a scalpel over hammer sort of car. The Yokohamas could be a way around the Hoosier tax while also fitting the 226mm gauge. Do y'all have any indication when more 15" sizes might ship? 225/45 specifically.

frenchyd
frenchyd MegaDork
9/26/22 11:33 a.m.

In reply to Andy Hollis :

Thank you for that information.  I'd like to use the Goodyears simply because that's what Group 44 originally used on their Jaguar V12 XJS 
How durable do you believe these tires to be?  Can they last a weekend or two of Vintage racing, or hopefully a season of a few race weekends?  

JG Pasterjak
JG Pasterjak Production/Art Director
9/26/22 12:14 p.m.

In reply to frenchyd :

In my experience with the Goodyears, they have about two "magic" het cycles in them. Then they fall off a bit but remain grippy and consistent for another 8-10. Then they start their crawl toward death.

frenchyd
frenchyd MegaDork
9/26/22 1:11 p.m.

In reply to JG Pasterjak :

Well that should work.  Use a set of scabby old dead un's  to get the basic wheels pointed in the right direction  then mount the new tires for the race. 

jbrauer11
jbrauer11 New Reader
9/26/22 1:20 p.m.

Still waiting for GRM to acknowledge the existence of the Hankook Z214.

https://hankookmotorsports.com/products/hankook-z214-tires?variant=37854010474663

deaconblue
deaconblue New Reader
9/26/22 1:24 p.m.

You make no mention of the last line in the chart, which is the Yoko A052?  Was that included just for reference from another tire test?

BDG
BDG GRM+ Memberand New Reader
9/26/22 4:19 p.m.

In reply to jbrauer11 :

They definitely tested the Z214 against its competitors. Looked like it was pretty damn close to the Hoosier.

Unfortunately, that was in 2005 and the Hoosier was an A3S05. So uh... yeah.

 

RJStanford
RJStanford GRM+ Memberand New Reader
9/26/22 5:46 p.m.

In reply to deaconblue :

Keep scrolling down below the comments 

RJStanford
RJStanford GRM+ Memberand New Reader
9/26/22 5:46 p.m.

In reply to deaconblue :

Keep scrolling down below the comments 

MorpheusVxA
MorpheusVxA
9/26/22 6:00 p.m.

What about Toyo RR's??

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