mikef523
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2014
- Threads
- 33
- Messages
- 471
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- 103
- Location
- Missouri City, TX
- Vehicle(s)
- 15 Mustang eco, 17 explorer, 17 Jaguar F-Pace
- Thread starter
- #1
I have read a lot of negative comments about Pirelli tires here. And after a drive a couple days ago, I am thinking maybe there is some credence to the things I have read.
I have owned a lot of cars in my life, and most (especially in my younger days), were not performance cars by any means. In fact, the closest I can come to a performance car was my 96 Lincoln MarkVIII. But of all the cars I have owned, with just standard factory tires, I must say that these Pirellis on the Mustang really disappointed me the other day.
I was "showing off my car" to a couple of my buddies, and pushing it pretty hard in Sport mode, when I came up on a pretty slight curve. Nothing major, Just a small curve while still laying on the throttle.
Well, All three of us got a little freaked out at how the car seemed to be on the (brink) of losing traction. And I was not going so fast that this should have happened.
So, my question is, are these tires at fault? I live in Houston, so I am guessing that I have either all season tires, or summer tires. I really don't know which.
Is it really the Pirellis? Or is this car just Too light is the ass end?
I know damn well it should not have started slipping under these circumstances.
Just on a side note....I once bought High performance tires for the Mark VIII, and those damn tires only lasted me about One year. I later found out that High performance tires are Definatly not what you need for daily driving. I found out the hard way, and it cost me a shitload of cash.
I have owned a lot of cars in my life, and most (especially in my younger days), were not performance cars by any means. In fact, the closest I can come to a performance car was my 96 Lincoln MarkVIII. But of all the cars I have owned, with just standard factory tires, I must say that these Pirellis on the Mustang really disappointed me the other day.
I was "showing off my car" to a couple of my buddies, and pushing it pretty hard in Sport mode, when I came up on a pretty slight curve. Nothing major, Just a small curve while still laying on the throttle.
Well, All three of us got a little freaked out at how the car seemed to be on the (brink) of losing traction. And I was not going so fast that this should have happened.
So, my question is, are these tires at fault? I live in Houston, so I am guessing that I have either all season tires, or summer tires. I really don't know which.
Is it really the Pirellis? Or is this car just Too light is the ass end?
I know damn well it should not have started slipping under these circumstances.
Just on a side note....I once bought High performance tires for the Mark VIII, and those damn tires only lasted me about One year. I later found out that High performance tires are Definatly not what you need for daily driving. I found out the hard way, and it cost me a shitload of cash.
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