I think you have to have two sets of wheels and tires around here, why? Well I don't drive as well as Ben, second it's not the ice and snow that bother my tires, it's the cold. When it gets below 50 they get hard as rocks, the slide and spin easily. This may not be the case with the Dunlops or others but it is sure true of the Bridgestones, my son has the same issue with his 760's as I do with my Re-01's. Maybe it is the very stiff sidewalls of the Bridgstones, but they really suck when it gets cold.
Brakes, it's all about money. There are lots of options some just cost more than others, the Rotora front brake kit is a mere $2000 that's just the front! I will no way be able to afford the Stage III SS brakes but I will be a "tester" and get a little better deal, at full price they will be cheaper than the Rotora and will be all 4 with bigger 13" slotted discs.
You are too kind, Goat. You drive great. I saw what you had side by side on 211 that time. But you actually had more even yet. I figure you were just being nice and letting me by. I got so excited I lost the entire column trying to calm down and rejoin the group.
Anyway, there is no doubt that the Dunlops get hard and lose traction when the mercury dips below 35. I just adjust my driving accordingly. Less Gs in turns, keep the car straight under braking, and less aggressive application of throttle. Even when backing off like that, I still feel safer and more confident on them than on the stock F1s which, well, they are just kind of all over the place and unpredictable, I guess, under any conditions.
I think the hot ticket on brakes is the SolSport Wilwood setup. But its spendy. Its no accident that, of all the braking systems under the sun, we picked six jug Wilwoods for the front and twin piston Wilwoods for the rear of the Bottom Dollar Coupe. With slotted cryo rotors. Wilwood pads, too.
I can say that I am not disappointed after the third competitive outing on them.
This weekend, the granddaddy of long circuit autocross -- Cumberland Airport.
That is holy ground, and the most laid back fun high speed nut clutching autocrossing there is. Basically, you charge up and down an airport runway, and the fast guys see third and up to 80 mph entering the showcase "kink" where lifting often means spinning. It is the stomping ground of many fast Cobras, Vettes, Camaros, Lotus Sevens, open wheel race cars, and other exotica, but also home to stock Caprices, Luminas and everything else.
There is a picnic Saturday night between races at the beautiful farm of a fanatic vintage Corvette collector, where can be seen dozens of rare or one of a kind Chebbies.
CDC is the kiddie pool compared to Cumberland. But they are salty, funny, not take yourself too seriously fun guys, and even they they go through the motions of classing the cars, raw times rule, and it is the opposite of SCCA in the uptight department.
http://www.nationalroadrally.com/