15k laps, not hours....
It was a simple question: are Neros any good on track in comparison to any of the other mainstream brands? Even though there's probably not much between the brands, some are still harder or softer than others, or have different characteristics, just like race tyres. I've never driven a front-wheel-drive road car on road tyres on a track. Yep, I know they'll go off, but some are more tolerant than others. As I mentioned earlier, this Clio is intended to be a "brake pads only" track day car as an antidote to potential money-pits - so it now has DS2500s on it.
To put it all in context, there are four of us, all with varying degrees of race experience, all retired or nearing retirement, and we all have the track itch to scratch after a few years away. Over Christmas we wrote four car descriptions (a taxi, an estate, a van, and a hatchback) on pieces of paper, stuck them in a pint pot, and whichever one we drew out would be a track day car we'd source and use in 2018. The only rule was the only thing we could change would be brake pads, although if the car was modified by the previous owner, then we could keep those mods. The Clio happens to have Neros on it.
I got the hatch, the estate car is a BMW, the van is some VW thing, and the taxi - basically any saloon - is an Alfa.