Nothing wrong with having the PP parts on a DD aside from the summer tires. They are marginally more useful in summer, at least on the streets, and seemingly much worse (than A/S) when its cold....
The PP is meant for track use, not for daily driving. That's why it comes with summer tires and everything else, since they don't expect anyone to be stupid enough to use a track setup car on regular streets, especially in the winter. Complete overkill and a waste of money for a daily driver, but if you bought it to use as a track toy, that's what it's for.
But shhh, don't tell that to half the people on here lol
:hail:If the tires don't have grip, you can still lose control if you overdrive the tires. The tires DO matter, and a lot.
The ones that annoy me are the people who do stupid things then bitch about Ford selling the PP with summer tires, since they clearly don't understand what they bought, and just bought what they thought would be "cool". There's just been so many threads lately with the cold weather setting in, it's hilarious.

Truly, it's not all that difficult to keep your driving within the limits of tire grip. Not even with summer tires in the winter, though you have to dial it back from the kind of hammering away at the throttle that you can get away with doing in the summer. It's a ridiculously simple concept.half the country is cold half the year, but people pay more for the PP to get better "Performance" and then have to drive extra careful for half the year because their tires get slicker when its cold :lol:
We need someone to get to the bottom of this scientifically rather than speculate over dozens (or hundreds) of postingsTruly, it's not all that difficult to keep your driving within the limits of tire grip. Not even with summer tires in the winter, though you have to dial it back from the kind of hammering away at the throttle that you can get away with doing in the summer. It's a ridiculously simple concept.
Even with all-seasons, your mantra should be exactly what they tell us at the drivers' meeting at cold weather track days . . . "cold tires . . .cold tires . . . cold tires". Free advice that could end up being priceless, even if you don't own a PP-equipped car.
He was trying to drive beyond what his skill set could realistically support, and he at least had the stones to admit as much. The only part the car played was making it easy enough to happen at 50 mph in 4th gear. At 20 in 1st or 2nd, far less powerful cars would give you the same kind of ride.http://jalopnik.com/i-drove-a-challe...-it-1753762683
I Drove A Challenger Hellcat And I Almost Crashed It
... And this is how I ended up on a twisty road in central Pennsylvania last weekend, trying to regain my composure after I almost ran off the road.
I suspect its cold in PA, and he is on summer tires :shocked:
agree, I have been focusing more on tires, but the original posting does sound more driver error.I'm afraid that 'scientifically' would require the services of a driver skilled in coping with the behavior of cold tires just to get results repeatable enough to have any value. As such, you cannot expect the people having trouble with cold tires to be able to match it. Never mind that it's been a too-much-throttle issue here rather than a matter of braking.

Two points....^^^ this is so wise and true. I do this all the time, testing the edges of the cars capabilities so when I'm in a emergency situation I will have confidence in responding to it. 2nd point, the TC, sport trac, advanc trac is such a confusing, mysterious mess(to me anyway) in how it is going to "control" the car, I turn everything off if the pavement is dry.I fully expect the rear of my '08 GT to step out a little from time to time during the winter, and always being alert to that possibility is half the battle. It did exactly that this morning (19°F, Michelin PSS tires), mostly because I was intentionally trying to provoke it a little. Emphasis is on "a little", as it was a refresher course to myself about how much or little grip I should be expecting to have available for my normal driving.
Norm
We need someone to get to the bottom of this scientifically rather than speculate over dozens (or hundreds) of postings
I'd like to see that as well. I'm in Northern Va and just switched to my wheels with Blizzaks about a week ago. They have so much more grip on cold dry, and cold wet days it's amazing. They aren't constantly hopping in the rain either like the P-Zeros.good video. Big difference between A/S and Winters
I would like to see a similar video comparing the 3 tire types on very cold but dry pavement. No snow or slush.