mike harper
Paid Member
Slicks will not have reviews. Slicks are made to do a job and that is rarely more than an hour's total running or in the case of GT's, more than a tank of fuel. It is not uncommon at all to come across posts from people wondering why their part worn slicks have not lasted a morning. 3 to 3.5 mm is the typically the most rubber you get on a slick. You will get some generic ones, such as sprint slicks, or Hill Climb which are ridiculously soft but would be toast after 2 to 3 laps of most circuits. If you are running a championship that used slicks you would most likely be taking to the manufacture to get the tyre construction and compounds tweaked you what you need. You would then of course be buying several hundred tyres across the year. The ones you can get from Demon Tweeks etc will have been designed for something, just that they are now selling them openly. No slick is made specifically for track day use. If you are racing then stuff like how quickly they come on, if they are 2/10ths quicker, and why, and how long they remain competitive matters, it is not something that should matter at all on a track day. What you will find however is that thy will place a great deal more strain on the car. You would ideally have spring, damper and geometry set up to cope with this and you do run the risk, if you over grip "normal" suspension of just making the car feel dull.
Thanks for the reply and certainly echoes some of the questions I have in my own mind.
I love the handling of the std clio - feels like it’s really on the edge on track, and you have to really drive it.
My ideal would be the same handling traits but at a quicker overall speed. I don’t want to compromise the handling for outright lap time. To get an inert, stable, car that is 20% a lap quicker would be very boring.
I can well imagine I’ll chase my perfect result and then end up reverting it to stock hence my seemingly inane questions
All the responses are helpful though in shaping the overall picture of what I want to do