ripp
ClioSport Club Member
182 FFAT
Hi there,
I'm having this dilema for couple of hours now.. Went out to test drive the car after changing a faulty fuel injector, entered a roundabout (not a small and tight one) at about 20mph and the back end just went out!
Conditions were like this:
-dusk, 8 degrees celsius, tarmack was damp but very lightly (you could barely notice -almost looked like dry really)
the car:
-tracking is ok, tyres 195/50 R15 (toyo snowprox S952 front, bridgestone blizzak LM25 rear), tyre pressure as standard recommendation
-gaz gha coilovers in very good shape (no leaks, I keep them protected with socks all year long)
-1,5 negative camber front (via camber bolts), standard rear, solid k-tec top mounts
-antirollbar poly bushes, the rest standard but in good shape, no other loose suspension stuff (as far as I know)
Ok so now I am thinking "the rear tyres are couple of years old, they don't hold up very well anymore" , the fronts are new, only have them for two months (DOT 2017)
After this I wondered how an emergency brake would end up so went up to 60-70kmh, mildly stamped on the brakes and BOOM, ABS kicked in imediatelly, it just felt like I was braking on snow (ok not quite but still!) and at that point I was like WTF is this?
It's not that cold, the road is slightly damp, front tyres are new, suspension and tracking is ok, tyre pressures ok..
A friend of mine was with me in the passenger seat and he also noticed the awkward behavior.
Went imediatelly home (he was visiting me), jumped in his Audi A4 avant (2013 model) and went 15 minutes later in the exact roundabout, entered at about the same speed and NOTHING, not even a hint of ESP kicking in, the car was very stable..
Did the braking test then from 60-70kmh and it was night and day, almost felt like a dry brake test, he had to push the pedal noticeably harder for the ABS to kick in.
His car is on Viking winter tyres, 225/55 R16, also standard recommended pressure, the rest of the car is also 100% stock.
So.. a respectable hot hatch handling-wise is shamed by a diesel 1600kg audi A4?
Will do a side by side test with a friend and his 172 these days hopefully and see what's what.
Untill then, is there something I'm missing here?
Sorry for the long story but felt like all the details matter
Cheers!
I'm having this dilema for couple of hours now.. Went out to test drive the car after changing a faulty fuel injector, entered a roundabout (not a small and tight one) at about 20mph and the back end just went out!
Conditions were like this:
-dusk, 8 degrees celsius, tarmack was damp but very lightly (you could barely notice -almost looked like dry really)
the car:
-tracking is ok, tyres 195/50 R15 (toyo snowprox S952 front, bridgestone blizzak LM25 rear), tyre pressure as standard recommendation
-gaz gha coilovers in very good shape (no leaks, I keep them protected with socks all year long)
-1,5 negative camber front (via camber bolts), standard rear, solid k-tec top mounts
-antirollbar poly bushes, the rest standard but in good shape, no other loose suspension stuff (as far as I know)
Ok so now I am thinking "the rear tyres are couple of years old, they don't hold up very well anymore" , the fronts are new, only have them for two months (DOT 2017)
After this I wondered how an emergency brake would end up so went up to 60-70kmh, mildly stamped on the brakes and BOOM, ABS kicked in imediatelly, it just felt like I was braking on snow (ok not quite but still!) and at that point I was like WTF is this?
It's not that cold, the road is slightly damp, front tyres are new, suspension and tracking is ok, tyre pressures ok..
A friend of mine was with me in the passenger seat and he also noticed the awkward behavior.
Went imediatelly home (he was visiting me), jumped in his Audi A4 avant (2013 model) and went 15 minutes later in the exact roundabout, entered at about the same speed and NOTHING, not even a hint of ESP kicking in, the car was very stable..
Did the braking test then from 60-70kmh and it was night and day, almost felt like a dry brake test, he had to push the pedal noticeably harder for the ABS to kick in.
His car is on Viking winter tyres, 225/55 R16, also standard recommended pressure, the rest of the car is also 100% stock.
So.. a respectable hot hatch handling-wise is shamed by a diesel 1600kg audi A4?
Will do a side by side test with a friend and his 172 these days hopefully and see what's what.
Untill then, is there something I'm missing here?
Sorry for the long story but felt like all the details matter
Cheers!