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-   -   15” Tires lol (http://www.clubcobra.com/forums/tires-wheels/144672-15-tires-lol.html)

jknich 04-14-2021 02:57 PM

Letter size to new size chart. Years ago I used G60 in front and L60 in rear.

Tire Conversion Chart, Old Sizes to Radial Sizes

Sycraft 05-04-2021 10:37 AM

ok, so I did not order Avons, looking at Mickey Thompson, and yes they make Bias Ply ( although they are not what I am getting)

3040csx 05-04-2021 06:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sycraft (Post 1492556)
Ordered Avons- CR6ZZ. 225/60/15 front and 245/60/15 rear... only .4 inch tread width rear narrower from the 275

We don’t care about Avon’s this thread about bias ply tires only

3040csx 05-04-2021 06:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jknich (Post 1491779)
Letter size to new size chart. Years ago I used G60 in front and L60 in rear.

Tire Conversion Chart, Old Sizes to Radial Sizes

L60 in the rear ? I was thinking more like n50s

BigGuy 05-05-2021 09:39 AM

Last year did 295/50R15 rear and 235/60R15 front BFG radial T/A.

Handle well, don’t wonder like bias ply.
Ok in rain if needed. My .02

jknich 05-05-2021 10:09 AM

The L60 was on a 67 Firebird. N50 would be better for the rear of a Cobra.

3040csx 05-06-2021 06:49 PM

I’m really leaning towards G 60-15‘s in the front and N50-15s in the rear
Kind of scary though that I can’t find one cobra with that tire combination
There’s got to be somebody out there somewhere that has this set up

Timinator 05-07-2021 05:59 AM

If you order the tires through someone like Discount, they'll let you reorder something else if, after mounting either the fronts or rears, you don't like the look......

eschaider 05-07-2021 11:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 3040csx (Post 1492633)
I’m really leaning towards G 60-15‘s in the front and N50-15s in the rear
Kind of scary though that I can’t find one cobra with that tire combination
There’s got to be somebody out there somewhere that has this set up

On cars like ours, with so few choices in many areas, when you find no one using or doing what you are contemplating, there is typically a reason.

While the driver of any high powered vehicle needs to be deliberate and circumspect, it is even more true about our cars. A Cobra replica can have chassis improvements and handling improvements that can equal or exceed those of the original vehicles — this is good. In addition to the handling the car easily eclipse the torque and power of the original's by 150 to 200% without blinking an eye!

Don't forget the original cars held the Guiness world record for zero to 100 to zero for some outrageous period of time 20, 30 maybe more years. The engines we have today make vintage engines pale in comparison.

The sole item between your replica and the ground is the tire you put on the car. To under estimate the significance of this decision is to do yourself the greatest possible disservice.

There is a phenomena that Cobra's experience called trailing torque oversteer or TTO for short. It is what happens when you are negotiating a turn, sometimes not at a very high speed, and lift on the gas momentarily. Maybe you thought you wanted to slow a bit or maybe you thought you entry speed for the turn was a whisker too high.

What happens next does not have a lot to do with your reason for lifting and everything to do with the fact you lifted. The tail of your car will begin to rapidly drift to the outside of the turn and the nose of the car will begin to point to the inside of the turn. At this point there is no longer any recovery possible. This whole series of sad events can occur in less than a second or two at most.

Think it won't happen to you? Think again! There are many new owners with crashed Cobra's who just didn't believe the cars were capable of this level of mischief. Don't be fooled, they are and then some.

You will find any number of seasoned owners on this site that will tell you each time you get into the car and turn that little silver key, your car is going to try to kill you. This is not a conscious decision on the part of the car. It is a lack of understanding of the cars and their behavioral proclivities, by a driver, that will get that driver in trouble or worse killed.

BTW just about the time, give it a two to three year gestation period, that you think you really understand these cars and their idiosyncrasies is when you are at the greatest risk and most likely to kill yourself.

Irrespective of period correct look considerations buy the best possible tires you can afford that fit in your wheel wells. Don't skimp! When you do (skimp) you are playing Russian roulette with more than one bullet — and you didn't have to.

Be smart, be circumspect but above all be prudent and don't do anything that puts you at greater risk — you are already way over the top compared to almost every other performance car on the road.


Ed

patrickt 05-07-2021 12:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eschaider (Post 1492652)

Be smart, be circumspect but above all be prudent and don't do anything that puts you at greater risk...

But if you do, kindly live stream it for us.:cool:

Timinator 05-07-2021 01:45 PM

I remember years ago when I started racing S2's in the SCCA I bought this book on racing and car setup and the very first sentence in the book was. "You're either full throttle or full brakes, or you're slow". Obviously they never drove a Cobra before.

incoming 05-16-2021 03:25 PM

@Timinator, Yup.


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