Hi guys,
First time posting but have been reading for a bit now. I just got a set of RE71-RS to use primarily as an autocross tire and occasionally for road racing (I usually use RC1's). I recently had an issue with my new RE71RS showing some weird wear characteristics. I hope I am not being "that guy" making a post about tire wear, but I am looking for more knowledge and hoping to find out if something weird is about, or for me to use this as a learning opportunity to understand if I did something wrong (tire care or car setup) so that way it doesn't happen to me again.
A little bit of info before proceeding to the delaminating.
Car is a 2012 128i, prepped for SCCA STX. Some people may already know the car from some of the national events it has competed in. Car weighs ~2940 lbs without driver.
This year I got a set of RE71-RS in 245/40/17 primarily for autocross, but I had planned a time attack event in April that allowed me a 200 TW tire.
I did one autocross locally on these tires, and quickly realized these like to be run at a much lower pressure compared to A052's and RT660's. With that said at this point these tires had 8 autocross runs so far.
This last weekend I traveled down to Vegas to drive in a time attack event. The course was Las Vegas Motor Speedway - Outer Road Course. Temps that day were a peak of 86° iirc.
I wanted to be proactive on managing these tires so I was pretty religious at checking tire pressure and not overdriving them. I kept them at 28-30psi hot, on day one of the event. After my second session the center rib already started to degrade pretty bad. So I dropped the pressures even more and did one more session and called it a day to save the tires for the next day of the event. I ended up hitting 19 psi cold and 26 psi hot, which seems extremely low. This is what the tire was looking like:
Not sure if its hard to tell by the picture, but that center rib was way lower on tread than the rest.
The second day I ran with this, in hopes of taking some load off the center rib. I also found a tire pyrometer to borrow. So on one of the sessions, I checked it immediately. Did one hot lap, came in and my temperatures were roughly:
This session got cut short so I wasn't able to put more laps on the tire to get more temp into it. But you think with the temp gradient like this I wouldn't wear out the center anymore.
The next session I was able to run a few more laps consecutively. (Also I want to add, I tried to only do two hot laps in a row, and then a 6/10ths lap in-between to cool the tire off. This is what I was trying to do all day. )
After I parked after this session, I ran to borrow the pyrometer again and just recorded what I logged. The tire did have some time to cool off while I snagged the pyrometer, but not completely. here is the data from running a few more consecutive hot laps:
After this I called it for the day just to give myself time to get packed up and head home. This is what the tire looked like after day 2:
Car alignment and suspension:
Front: -3.7° camber. 0 toe
Rear: -2.3° camber. .10° toe
Dampers are freshly rebuilt JRZ RS-Pros. Spent the winter refreshing all of the suspension components as well (ball joints, bushings, etc.)
I want to add one more anecdotal piece to this. I actually had 4.1° of camber in the front prior to his year. With RT660's and A052's, I was wearing the outside shoulders out before anything else. (The reason for less is because I had a delrin offset bushing, but swapped to regular poly due to some other gripes I had with the delrin.)
I want to add, this was happening on all 4 corners. It wasn't isolated to one tire or one side.
Now my question is, is anyone else experiencing this issue? I noticed an evo at the track with these tires and by the end of day 2 it looked like theirs was starting to do the same thing, just not as aggressively as my car. Maybe this is a normal characteristic and I have nothing to worry about, or maybe I am doing something totally wrong.
The car was wicked fast all weekend. In terms of feel and grip, this is one of the best I have driven on. The car just felt like an absolute weapon on these.
Anyway, thank you for reading through this long winded post. I know there are a lot of people on this forum who have a lot more experience and knowledge than I do, and I am hoping to learn something from this post. Thank you.