Automotive
Fiat Coupe 20VT (to 2004)
Mini Cooper S (to 2006)
Honda CBR600RR (2005 to 2006)
BMW M3 E46 (2006 to 2007)
Ford Kuga 2.0TDCI 4wd 163 (2016)
BMW X5 X40d E70 (June 2016 to Nov 2017)
VW Golf GTI Edition 30 (Nov 2007 to June 2018)
Mercedes Benz A180 Auto (W176) (Nov 2017 to Aug 2020)
VW Golf GTI Edition 35 (June 2018 on)
VW Tiguan Mk2 2.0 TDI 150 DSG RLine (Aug 2020 on)
BMW S1000R SPORT (Oct 2021 on)
Pages
▼
Wednesday, 21 October 2015
where are my old cars? UK MOT history search
Had some fun trying out the beta service for MOT's in the UK
https://mot-history.net/
to find out if any of my old cars are still on the road.
perhaps lost forever
R801 KPF Fiat Coupe 20V Turbo gone to the great scrapyard in the sky (or SORN'd) , last MOT to 2012 with 99k miles
GSJ 429N Mini 1380 no record
E98 JNH VW Golf GTI 8V Mk2 no record
still going strong
SN04 UYZ E46 M3 just passed an MOT with 115,104 miles
DE03 EZC Toyota MR2 Mk3 just passed an MOT with 94,944 miles
NA09 OOC Seat Ibiza Sport : just passed MOT with only 49,380 miles
SC03 LDV BMW MINI still seems around with 116k miles
Wednesday, 14 October 2015
The Cheshire Mobile Creche website
a blatant promotion for my wifes new business venture.
As an experienced childcare provider, she now is offering mobile event childcare in the North West of the UK.
The Cheshire Mobile Creche
The Cheshire Mobile Crèche is a privately owned company providing bespoke, professional crèche services for weddings and other one-off events in the North West of England
For the technically minded this is a website built upon a Bootstrap template, hosted free as a GitHub page with a custom domain.
Monday, 12 October 2015
Ford kuga 2.0 tdci 163 mpg update 42.6mpg 550 miles
V power diesel with mostly 85mph cruise for a change. For some reason this car is more economical at higher speeds!
Friday, 9 October 2015
Thursday, 8 October 2015
Caring for your performance tyres - Michelin Pilot Super Sport
Useful article
from here
http://www.tyrereviews.co.uk/Article/Caring-for-your-performance-tyres-Michelin-Pilot-SuperSport.htm
Caring for your performance tyres - Michelin Pilot Super Sport
The Michelin Pilot Super Sport is one of the most talked about tyres on Tyre Reviews. It offers extreme track performance blended with balanced road manners and mileage that has yet to be rivalled, and as such it's an extremely popular tyre with performance car drivers such as BMW M cars, Porsche's, Ferrari's and many other hypercars. With this in mind, we thought it would be a good time to have a look at what went into the development of the Pilot Super Sport, and how you should treat them to get the maximum usable life from them.
General Development
It's widely known some of the ex Michelin Formula 1 team were put on the SuperSport project after Michelin withdrew from F1. How much of the technology was transferred across?
- Ok. Some of the Compound and casing developers on this project were directly involved in our motorsport program in the era of F1. The same guys have also been involved in designing tyres for Le Mans and Endurance racing. Our team doesn't really split down motorsport/road tyre lines. So when we say track to street we mean it. Not only do we transfer directly some materials from one type to the other, but also industrial and production techniques. There are some things we do with the SuperSport (& Cup2) that you can't do in motorsport, e.g. dual compounds, and in some ways the PSS & PS Cup2 are more advanced than the motorsport tyres. We have transferred technology directly, simply because it works. Our Formula-e tyre and 18" WRC Tarmac tyre are virtually the same pattern as the PS Cup2, and similar to the PSS.
How different is the Pilot Super Sport to the tyre it replaced, the Pilot Sport 2?
- Very. The PS2 was developed during our time in F1, but was a significant step at the time over the original Pilot Sport. The Pilot Sport 3 is a tyre with a different philosophy slightly. It's not a tyre as suited to track work. The Pilot Super Sport has really taken over that part of what the PS2 was capable of. We still had a few homologation and fitments with PS2 that are still working well years down the line (Boxster/911 and some "M" BMW's). There's always a bit of "family resemblance" between generations of tyres, as what we learned we don't unlearn, but in the case of Pilot Super Sport, it uses a totally different production technology compared to PS2. Therefore, it's a new approach, as the factory processes allow us to do things we could never have done with PS2. Meaning materials can be used now that couldn't have been used successfully with PS2.
- Ok. Some of the Compound and casing developers on this project were directly involved in our motorsport program in the era of F1. The same guys have also been involved in designing tyres for Le Mans and Endurance racing. Our team doesn't really split down motorsport/road tyre lines. So when we say track to street we mean it. Not only do we transfer directly some materials from one type to the other, but also industrial and production techniques. There are some things we do with the SuperSport (& Cup2) that you can't do in motorsport, e.g. dual compounds, and in some ways the PSS & PS Cup2 are more advanced than the motorsport tyres. We have transferred technology directly, simply because it works. Our Formula-e tyre and 18" WRC Tarmac tyre are virtually the same pattern as the PS Cup2, and similar to the PSS.
How different is the Pilot Super Sport to the tyre it replaced, the Pilot Sport 2?
- Very. The PS2 was developed during our time in F1, but was a significant step at the time over the original Pilot Sport. The Pilot Sport 3 is a tyre with a different philosophy slightly. It's not a tyre as suited to track work. The Pilot Super Sport has really taken over that part of what the PS2 was capable of. We still had a few homologation and fitments with PS2 that are still working well years down the line (Boxster/911 and some "M" BMW's). There's always a bit of "family resemblance" between generations of tyres, as what we learned we don't unlearn, but in the case of Pilot Super Sport, it uses a totally different production technology compared to PS2. Therefore, it's a new approach, as the factory processes allow us to do things we could never have done with PS2. Meaning materials can be used now that couldn't have been used successfully with PS2.
Tyre Care
What sort of break-in / warm-up treatment would you advise for the Pilot Super Sport?
- I'd always encourage an initial 50-100 miles of a "bedding-in" period, simply to remove any mould release from the tyres (all tyre manufacturers tend to spray the inside of the mould with a silicon type spray to allow the mould and tyre to separate post curing, it's what gives them the shiny look). This can't often be the case with track work, but I'd say give the tyres a lap or two of gentle work to bed in and just slightly warm up prior to giving them any hard fast work. From a warm up perspective, same really applies. For track work, I'd give it a couple of warm up laps to build heat and pressure in the tyre, before asking it to give it's full potential. Often common sense too as it warms the car and brakes up before hitting them hard. For road work, it doesn't apply as much, but if you pull out of your drive on a cold winters morning, and hit the throttle hard at the end of the street pulling onto the main road, don't be surprised if you spin the wheels. You need some heat in them to get optimum grip.
What about heat cycling on the road or track?
- The Pilot Super Sport won't really go through a heat cycle from road use. It never reaches extreme temperatures, and yes, while you might "give it some beans" at some point on a fast Sunday drive, it's never sustained for long periods with the tyre doing high energy lateral and longitudinal work. Where as on a track, it's both and sometimes with and sliding or power, for sustained periods and followed by cooling (after a session). Hence heat cycling does affect the level of grip, primarily after track work. It will lower the peak grip, but only by a small level. After hard track work the more dominant factor could be wear and damage to the tread, reducing grip more by the fact you have reduced the amount of rubber in contact with the road.
So what are the best practices for longevity and grip throughout the tyre life?
- It's really a balance between not "killing" the tyre and giving it a good workout. Whilst I do expect a lot of customers buying the PSS to drive them hard, on road and track, a little bit of common sense and smoother driving will often yield the best results. Don't overdrive the tyre. whilst it looks good going sideways with smoke emanating from the tyre. If the tyre isn't gripping, come back off the throttle slightly, correct the steering and you'll find the tyre coming back into it's window and grip circle. Even Lewis Hamilton can't get more grip than a tyre has. It's about keeping it within a manageable window. Listen to the feedback from the car, and adapt. On tyre life and wear, again it's all subjective, but you'd be surprised how few tyres come off with even flat wear. So keep on top of camber and toe, and adapt as required.
- I'd always encourage an initial 50-100 miles of a "bedding-in" period, simply to remove any mould release from the tyres (all tyre manufacturers tend to spray the inside of the mould with a silicon type spray to allow the mould and tyre to separate post curing, it's what gives them the shiny look). This can't often be the case with track work, but I'd say give the tyres a lap or two of gentle work to bed in and just slightly warm up prior to giving them any hard fast work. From a warm up perspective, same really applies. For track work, I'd give it a couple of warm up laps to build heat and pressure in the tyre, before asking it to give it's full potential. Often common sense too as it warms the car and brakes up before hitting them hard. For road work, it doesn't apply as much, but if you pull out of your drive on a cold winters morning, and hit the throttle hard at the end of the street pulling onto the main road, don't be surprised if you spin the wheels. You need some heat in them to get optimum grip.
What about heat cycling on the road or track?
- The Pilot Super Sport won't really go through a heat cycle from road use. It never reaches extreme temperatures, and yes, while you might "give it some beans" at some point on a fast Sunday drive, it's never sustained for long periods with the tyre doing high energy lateral and longitudinal work. Where as on a track, it's both and sometimes with and sliding or power, for sustained periods and followed by cooling (after a session). Hence heat cycling does affect the level of grip, primarily after track work. It will lower the peak grip, but only by a small level. After hard track work the more dominant factor could be wear and damage to the tread, reducing grip more by the fact you have reduced the amount of rubber in contact with the road.
So what are the best practices for longevity and grip throughout the tyre life?
- It's really a balance between not "killing" the tyre and giving it a good workout. Whilst I do expect a lot of customers buying the PSS to drive them hard, on road and track, a little bit of common sense and smoother driving will often yield the best results. Don't overdrive the tyre. whilst it looks good going sideways with smoke emanating from the tyre. If the tyre isn't gripping, come back off the throttle slightly, correct the steering and you'll find the tyre coming back into it's window and grip circle. Even Lewis Hamilton can't get more grip than a tyre has. It's about keeping it within a manageable window. Listen to the feedback from the car, and adapt. On tyre life and wear, again it's all subjective, but you'd be surprised how few tyres come off with even flat wear. So keep on top of camber and toe, and adapt as required.
Tread life
How will the tyres dry / wet grip balance change on the way to 1.6mm?
- Remember that all the tread grooves do is help clear the water from the contact patch to allow the tyre to actually grip a slightly dried road surface. Therefore, on a slightly damp surface there shouldn't be a significant difference between a new tyre and a worn one. (Assuming even wear). The wet braking grip will deteriorate with most tyres, by about a car length @ 50mph from new to worn. So the shift in weight braking is small. With Dry braking, in some cases it may actually slightly improve with a worn tyre, as there is less movement from the tread blocks. However it's small (1-2m). Therefore I'd always say it's better to have a bit of tread depth, but I would never be panicking to take at tyre off at 3mm
Can you use the tyre safely past this on track assuming even wear?
- Yes, within reason. As remember once you get down to the bottom of the tread depth, you are only a few mm away from starting to wear out the belts and carcass. Which could be a disaster. Plus the tread rubber offers grip, some rubbers under the tread are only there to bond other components together. I'd ask people to exercise a great deal of caution. Worn tyres might do one track day.. but that's again assuming that the tyres are worn evenly. It might be 1.6mm on the outside and worn more excessively on the inside. I'd certainly never advocate under 1.6mm on the roads, as it's against the law. So the safety and legal implications aren't worth the risk on the road.
A big thank you to Michelin for taking the time to answer our questions. For more information on the Michelin Pilot Super Sport, please read our user reviews and test ratings. Any further questions? Please ask in the comments below!
- Remember that all the tread grooves do is help clear the water from the contact patch to allow the tyre to actually grip a slightly dried road surface. Therefore, on a slightly damp surface there shouldn't be a significant difference between a new tyre and a worn one. (Assuming even wear). The wet braking grip will deteriorate with most tyres, by about a car length @ 50mph from new to worn. So the shift in weight braking is small. With Dry braking, in some cases it may actually slightly improve with a worn tyre, as there is less movement from the tread blocks. However it's small (1-2m). Therefore I'd always say it's better to have a bit of tread depth, but I would never be panicking to take at tyre off at 3mm
Can you use the tyre safely past this on track assuming even wear?
- Yes, within reason. As remember once you get down to the bottom of the tread depth, you are only a few mm away from starting to wear out the belts and carcass. Which could be a disaster. Plus the tread rubber offers grip, some rubbers under the tread are only there to bond other components together. I'd ask people to exercise a great deal of caution. Worn tyres might do one track day.. but that's again assuming that the tyres are worn evenly. It might be 1.6mm on the outside and worn more excessively on the inside. I'd certainly never advocate under 1.6mm on the roads, as it's against the law. So the safety and legal implications aren't worth the risk on the road.
A big thank you to Michelin for taking the time to answer our questions. For more information on the Michelin Pilot Super Sport, please read our user reviews and test ratings. Any further questions? Please ask in the comments below!
Nokian SUV Z Line
http://www.tyrereviews.co.uk/Article/2015-Off-Road-SUV-4x4-Tyre-Test.htm
1st: Nokian zLine SUV
Total: 30 / Dry: 8 / Wet: 9 / Rolling Resistance: 9 / Noise: 4
Positive: Good handling and braking on dry and wet roads
Negative: Expensive
The 2015 Off Road Magazine SUV and 4x4 tyre test covered 9 tyres in 225/55 R18 on a Mercedes ML250.
Here are some of my previous nokian updates.
Nokian appear to have updated the tyre slightly
So far fitted 44714 miles , now at 74000, so currently 30,000 miles !!! and still have 3mm on the front and 5mm (or more) on the back.
I may rotate or fit new fronts for the winter to be safe
At this rate they are a fantastic tyre.
http://johnoldfield.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/nokian-tyre-update.html
http://johnoldfield.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/ford-kuga-new-tyres-fitted-2354519.html
1st: Nokian zLine SUV
Total: 30 / Dry: 8 / Wet: 9 / Rolling Resistance: 9 / Noise: 4
Positive: Good handling and braking on dry and wet roads
Negative: Expensive
The 2015 Off Road Magazine SUV and 4x4 tyre test covered 9 tyres in 225/55 R18 on a Mercedes ML250.
Here are some of my previous nokian updates.
Nokian appear to have updated the tyre slightly
So far fitted 44714 miles , now at 74000, so currently 30,000 miles !!! and still have 3mm on the front and 5mm (or more) on the back.
I may rotate or fit new fronts for the winter to be safe
At this rate they are a fantastic tyre.
http://johnoldfield.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/nokian-tyre-update.html
http://johnoldfield.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/ford-kuga-new-tyres-fitted-2354519.html
300,000 mile Golf GTI article
Significant mileage, so worth a link here
300,000 mile Golf GTI
http://hilllaneconsulting.co.uk/blog/?page_id=287