Desertnate
Well-known member
- Aug 5, 2013
- 6,236
- 291
- Thread starter
- #21
I wish they were +1![]()
If it were my choice I'd actually go down a size in diameter from 18" to 17" and widen them from 7.5 to 8.
This would give you a lighter wheel with better/cheaper tire choices and the ability to run 225 or even 235 width tires for a larger contact patch. Visually the differences would be minor, if noticeable at all.
The only real reason I can see to keep the 18's on a car this light would be if you intend to track the brains out of this car and upgrade to a BBK.
At some point I'm going to need a second set of wheels. I'll probably keep these for three-season use and go smaller/wider for my autocross/lots of fun set up.
Really nice car. When they first came out I was like Meh. But not only have they fixed the dip in torque around 3500 rpm's they actually put real real tires on it. Michelin PS4. I want one. Best of luck with it.
I test drove an FR-S at the same time I stumbled across this car (which was completely unlisted ANYWHERE). IMO the differences between the Gen 1 and Gen 2 cars are far more than the media lets on.
While the chassis might be simple upgrade to make it stiffer, everything is very different. The engine (obviously), clutch action, shift action, and interior are a huge improvement over the previous gen. The ride seems a bit better too. It's just as stiff with no real body motion and fantastic cornering, but it doesn't crash over imperfections in the road like the old one. This one just bounces sharply.
Something else few people mention is the engine sounds very different (even without the stupid sound maker), and it's WAY smoother in operation. Compared to my previous German cars the old FRS felt like I was driving a go-cart with a tractor engine. Not very pleasant.