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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre choice (tire)

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Chris Turner
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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby Chris Turner » 17 Dec 2015 18:41

I have a set of both the Uniroyals and the Continental, both are very good.
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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby supercass » 17 Dec 2015 21:42

Uniroyals get good reviews. They are the tyres I purchased. Sure they were cheaper than £250. They didn't work out much dearer than budget brands. supercass

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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby busheytrader » 19 Dec 2015 14:44

I'm pleased that I made the change to 14" wheels and tyres some years back. But their availability seems to be slowly going the way of 13" now.............. On to 15" in a few years?

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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby Hasbeen » 20 Dec 2015 11:26

!5 won't help much Bushey. People are fitting 17 s on Honda S2000 these days, as they are dropping 16s in the best rubber.

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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby spanner » 20 Dec 2015 12:31

Nissan use Continental Premium contact tyres as standard fit on Qashqi cars -fitted on my daughters car and also my wife's 4 x 4 version. We have no issues with them what so ever and guess that Nissan will have carried out their own research as well as quantity discounts.
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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby busheytrader » 20 Dec 2015 18:07

Hasbeen wrote:!5 won't help much Bushey. People are fitting 17 s on Honda S2000 these days, as they are dropping 16s in the best rubber.
Hasbeen


I guess I'll have to make my 14" Falkens (they work for me) last longer and moderate the right foot until they wear out. It'll be 35 profile tyres on 20" alloys when that happens?

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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby supercass » 20 Dec 2015 18:38

In my experience the premium brands are over rated and if you do your research carefully you can find a budget brand as good as if not better. supercass

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Triumph TR7 Wheel / tyre options (tire)

Postby FI Spyder » 21 Dec 2015 15:12

supercass wrote:In my experience the premium brands are over rated and if you do your research carefully you can find a budget brand as good as if not better. supercass


I agree. I used to study the tire comparison test religiously in the car magazines back in the day ('70's on) and buy tires accordingly. When I went to buy tires in 2007 for Spider, there were about half a dozen brands. Some of the name brands didn't have good reviews and one stood out as having good reviews and was one of the cheapest. It was Kumho a Korean brand that they installed, balanced and put a chrome vale stem on the alloys for $60 each after some negotiating. Was told they were the racing tire of the local PNW (Nascar type) racing series, they had won the single person buggy winner in last Paris Dakar rally. I've put them on all my cars since. I think they are pretty much world wide by now. I know Hasbeen has them and likes them. Generally speaking the softer the tire, the more grip, the shorter the life span (although life span usually not an issue as tires harden with time and 7 years is the limit. Manufacture date codes are on tires so make sure you aren't getting NOS tires in a seldom used size.
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Tyres.....Again.

Postby Hasbeen » 27 Feb 2017 05:04

Some months back on the homeward drive of a Triumph club run, we ran into one of our South East Queensland thunder storms. We probably got something over an inch of rain in about half an hour in general, but some parts would have had a couple of inches in less than an hour.

This was on a very twisty bit of our southern boarder ranges main road, the Mount Lindsay highway, with lots of up & down, with hairpins everywhere. I was in the 7, & was being followed by a Stag. Quite a bit of the really twisty stuff had very new, & pretty slippery when wet, stone mastic bitumen.

The 7 was doing more than a little tail waging, & I was having fun. I was not hurrying between corners, & the Stag was keeping up without trouble. At a coffee stop after the storm the Stag driver said he was a little surprised that although going perhaps a little slower through the corners, the Stag was not waging it's tail as much as the 7.

So while washing the thing I got down on my knees & checked the age of the Brigstones on the back. Shock horror, they are 8 years old. I know from experience these things are past their best by about 5 years, & way past their use by date at 8 years. I now know why I was having so much fun on that wet road. I also know these things will chuck me into a ditch sooner rather than later if I keep using them.

What to buy is the question. Many of our top brands as sold here are Asian manufacturer, & not what they used to be. Many no longer make anything worth fitting to 13" wheels, & I like my 7 on 13s. The big tyre bag is part of the suspension design & I don't want to change what I have now set up. Besides I can't even get the best stuff for my Honda S2000 with it's 16s.

I have Kumhos on the front, & although not quite the old Pirellis I had previously, they are not bad. However they no longer offer this particular rubber in 13" tyres.

What a long way of asking if anyone has a suggestion for 185 x 13s & 205 x 13" tyres for our cars?

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Re: Tyres.....Again.

Postby John_C » 27 Feb 2017 09:24

I switched to Vredestein all-weather tyres all around 18 months ago. Standard 185/70 13". The grip is better than anything else I've ever had on the car but I make that statement as pertinent to damp and wet conditions only. In dry conditions the car was always very good irrespective of the tyres so more difficult to judge. There seems to be less road noise coming through since the Vredesteins went on too which is of particular benefit if you have polyurethane bushes installed everywhere like I have.
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Re: Tyres.....Again.

Postby supercass » 27 Feb 2017 09:31

185 70 13 Uniroyal seem to have had good reviews. They were available from a German supplier. supercass

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Re: Tyres.....Again.

Postby Beans » 27 Feb 2017 11:48

I went for Continental EcoContact 3 on my DHC (185/70 R13) and they have performed well so far.
In comparison to the Vredestein Quatrac 5 they are slightly noisier (which you probably won't hear in a TR7) but their grip in the rain is better.
Half decent modern 205/60 R13 tyres are thin on the ground only found Toyo R888r or something completely different the Vredestein Sprint Classic. Both not cheap.
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