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check this vid, mostly fuellers and stuff, but you get to see all the wrap and distortion of the tyres in ultra ultra slow mo, amazing stuff to watch, you never think tyres get out of shape this much until you see a vid like this

http://videosift.com/story.php?id=5073

I posted that a while ago. Pretty insane! Before this video I thought that when a big slick creased up like that it was 100% driving the car forward but as you can see from the video, the deformed tyres actually spin 'while' they're creased right up.

Thank goodness for beadlocks I guess :)

That's what everyone kept telling me as well - i.e that the MT's didn't need much of a burnout, but in my experience, I find that the MT's initially need 1 or 2 BIG burnout's to really get some heat and grip into them (i.e enough smoke so you can't see anything else in the mirrors :( ) - then a smallish burnout on subsequent run's usually sufficed.

This was in contrast to the BFG's I used to have. I didn't think they needed as much of a burnout as the MT's to get the equivalent amount of heat and grip.

It's interesting to read how people have different experiences with same tyres...I think a lot of the variance probably comes down to track conditions though.

I find that the MT's initially need 1 or 2 BIG burnout's to really get some heat and grip into them (i.e enough smoke so you can't see anything else in the mirrors smile.gif ) - then a smallish burnout on subsequent run's usually sufficed.

Yep - same here. One biggie in the morning and then little ones for the rest of the day.

Or the difference between 1st/2nd gear burnouts...

werd!

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