ElChanclo
Stinger Enthusiast
If I can get a handful of track days out of them then it'll be worth it, considering street pads wear out after just 1 and I'd have to buy a new set anyway.The Bluestuff has been through 3 track events and quite a few AutoXs so far. There was a visible amount of wear on the Bluestuff after the first full Track Day, so I thought they might wear out pretty fast. Since then, wear rate hasn't been as high as I originally thought.
Keep me posted on that, I'm curious if it's just my car, or common for stingers to have uneven pad wear 3 different ways. Do your stingers have the Brembo calipers?The 2.0T Stinger is due for brake fluid flush, as soon as this hellishly hot weather lets up a bit. I'll get a chance to pull the pads for a closer inspection.
I've also kept the ABS and TC nannies on so far. I'll experiment with disabling them once I get my track pads sorted, and learn to reduce tire squeal through the corners.
That's where I decided to draw the line. Considering 95%+ of my driving is on public roads, I'm only making modifications that either don't negatively effect daily driving, or ones I can add and remove without too much time and effort.As much as we enjoy having fun on weekends. track time constitutes a very small % of miles driven. Most of the time/miles are on public roads, where I have zero interest in engaging in buffoonery...
Unless you become seriously competitive, does a few seconds faster/slower matter that much, realistically? I would concentrate on getting the rest of the car track-prepped properly.
At the end of the day it's still a 4000lb long wheelbase grand tourer. Time and money spent modifying it to be tack focused would be counter productive to it's GT purpose and would ultimately be better spent on a smaller & lighter coupe.
More sidewall is what I'm looking for; a smoother ride on public roads. Though I have no idea what effect going from the stock 3.5" sidewall to 4.3" will have. Might be too much, or not enough to notice or be worth the hassle.245/45R18 square would work too, although the sidewalls are gonna be quite a bit taller than your stock 19's.
I had the idea of throwing a square tire setup on the staggered OEM rims (235/40r19 should fit both the 8.0 and 8.5 widths) and timing a tire rotation just right so you only have to do it once before the tires wear out.
I figure 245 would compromise steering too much at the front, while going down to 235 for the rear should still be ok with AWD.