Definitive Car

Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123
Results 21 to 28 of 28

Thread: Seat Leon Cupra claims new Nurburgring lap record

  1. #21
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Erskineville, NSW
    Posts
    7,584
    Users Country Flag

    Quote Originally Posted by Diesel_vert View Post
    Michelin
    The Pilot Sport Cup 2 (180 AA A) is the successor to the Pilot Sport Cup (80 AA A). The UTQG numbers suggest it'll last more than twice as long as its predecessor. Again, Michelin only claim a 50% (not 125%) improvement in circuit wear, partly achieved by increasing the initial tread depth to 6.0 mm, compared to just 4.8 mm (!) for its predecessor.
    I've probably screwed this up but as we have discussed previously, the UTQG #s are somewhat arbitrary because the tyre company does it's own test.

    If it's 80 that means it lasts 80% of the life of the official control tyre? 120 would be 20% more than the control tyre? to get from 80 to 120 is +50% isn't it?

    But I agree, the numbers are barely even a guide for the same manufacturers tyres & almost useless when comparing between brands.

    FWIW, Bridgestone RE050A used to last between 20,000km-40,000km among my Subaru Liberty Gen4 mates. Some of them drove reasonably quick but were very smooth
    carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
    I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

  2. #22
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    463
    Users Country Flag
    Quote Originally Posted by brad View Post
    It would be slower because it has less power

    Would it?
    I agree it does have 50 more horses BUT 'the Ring' is a long track and driver skill and tyres come into play more. Be a good close race!

  3. #23
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    1,605
    Quote Originally Posted by brad View Post
    I've probably screwed this up but as we have discussed previously, the UTQG #s are somewhat arbitrary because the tyre company does it's own test.

    If it's 80 that means it lasts 80% of the life of the official control tyre? 120 would be 20% more than the control tyre? to get from 80 to 120 is +50% isn't it?

    But I agree, the numbers are barely even a guide for the same manufacturers tyres & almost useless when comparing between brands.
    At my own discretion, I took (80 AA A) as the baseline and worked out that (180 AA A) is a 125% improvement in raw percentage terms, which I took to mean, "last more than twice as long" (or 2.25 times longer, to be exact).

    So if (80 AA A) means a tread life of 5 000 km, then (180 AA A) would mean a tread life of 11 250 km. Hmm... more than 10k on a set of motorsport tyres? Or just a UTQG "recalibration"? I think the latter rather than the former.

    Michelin themselves (on their website) only quote a 50% improvement in circuit wear, which doesn't correspond with my own take on the UTQG numbers.

    I don't really know if my method is correct, but either way, irrespective of what the silly UTQG numbers are, I think one would be doing extraordinarily well to get more than 10 000 km on a set of Michelin PSC2 tyres.



    For those unaware, my overriding point is that Michelin Cup tyres are serious motorsport tyres through & through - don't be fooled by the UTQG numbers, people.



    Quote Originally Posted by brad View Post
    FWIW, Bridgestone RE050A used to last between 20,000km-40,000km among my Subaru Liberty Gen4 mates. Some of them drove reasonably quick but were very smooth
    Those figures look reasonable and are largely inline with what I expect from high-performance road tyres made by Bridgestone.

    Quote Originally Posted by grandturismo View Post
    Would it?
    I agree it does have 50 more horses BUT 'the Ring' is a long track and driver skill and tyres come into play more. Be a good close race!
    With the same driver and the same tyres, I think the Leon Cupra would be faster (close or otherwise) than the Golf GTI on most circuits, including the Nürburgring.

  4. #24
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Gosford Central Coast NSW
    Posts
    4,386
    Its practically VAG tradition that the fastest A platform car will be the respective series' Seat Cupra.

    The VW is always the best overall compromise. The Seat is always the sportiest, and the Skoda is always the most comfortable. This is right. This is zen. This is VAG.

    This is not by chance..... its the way VAG make it happen.

    I left out Audi... being the most luxurious and pompous (I know, I've got one )
    Last edited by gldgti; 08-03-2014 at 09:39 PM.
    '07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
    '98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
    '99 A4 Quattro 1.8T

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    1,605
    Seat Leon Cupra 'ring lap update - PistonHeads

    Okay, so we now know that particular model had:

    Michelin road legal motorsport tyres
    Brembo brakes with 4-pot calipers & 370 mm front discs
    Air-conditioning system removed



    A sub-eight minute time is still fast, as is the car itself - no doubt.

    However, in my eyes, it's a less impressive achievement (nor as surprising) given the above modifications, even if they're factory-fitted.



    I wasn't sure before, but I now think it's highly likely that the current RS Megane would probably beat it, given the same modifications.
    Last edited by Diesel_vert; 16-03-2014 at 03:49 PM.

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    332
    Thread Starter
    Ok the new renault 275 has managed to top this time, BUT look how far they had to go.
    Renault reveals fastest, most expensive Megane RS ever

    So they have done all those 3 things that you mentioned Diesel_vert,
    - Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2
    - 4-pot brakes (I think the 265 had these anyway)
    - Air-conditioning removed

    In addition they also removed the rear seat, the radio, changed the front seats to lightweight buckets, lightweight lithium battery and changed out the entire exhaust for a lightweight titanium system. And they have more power than the 265.
    With all of that they still only pip the Leon by 4 seconds. Considering the fact that they knew the Leon’s time beforehand so had a firm target, and there are no controls around how many laps they can run etc, and the gap they established over the Leone wasn't that big, I’m pretty sure they had to work pretty hard to beat that time.
    Now let’s see what the Civic manages when they finally arrive. They must be struggling to come to terms with the rapidly changing goalposts
    Last edited by abreut; 16-06-2014 at 09:43 PM. Reason: fix atrocious spelling

  7. #27
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    1,605
    Even if it serves no useful purpose for the average motorist, I think it's great to see car manufacturers pushing to see what their passenger car platforms are capable of in (mostly) production form without the full-on works race-spec treatment (but still driven by a professional driver/stig). However, I don't think it's terribly useful to be removing equipment on road cars, though at least Renault were upfront about its modifications straight away.

    Having said that, the current Megane is based on an old (and thus heavy) platform, so it was important for Renault to either reduce weight or increase power (or both) in order to match the power-to-weight ratio of the Cupra 280 (which is based on the new weight-optimised MQB platform).

    I'm also beginning to see what it takes for a production FWD hatchback (~1300 kg without driver, +200 kW, LSD, big brakes, motorsport tyres) to post a time of under eight minutes on the Nurburgring. Honda will certainly have to produce a car with similar specifications or better to get into the FWD sub-8 club.

    Curious to know what a standard Leon Cupra or RS Megane will do with just Michelin cup tyres though. The interest for me lies, not with the actual time per se, but the delta between road and motorsport tyres on a very long track.

  8. #28
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    melbourne
    Posts
    2,080

    ... given that factory adjustments/ mods are fair game:

    Driver Laurent Hurgon belted out a lap time of 7:54.3 around the challenging 20.8km circuit, ensuring Renault's new Trophy R wrested the crown back from the VW Group's 206kW Seat Leon Cupra 280 by four seconds.

    now hurry the hell up, Honda!

Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
| |