Remembering back, I thought it would be a neat idea to do the same test for the new tyres that I did back in this thread. The difference between tyre compounds is now bigger and smaller at the same time; R2 to R4 tyres now have very similar grip levels while the temperature ranges are further apart, but see for yourself.
As I've done in the last thread, I cannot stress enough that these values are all taken by eye and feel and might not represent LFS' real behaviour 100%.
The procedure to take the values was driving around the autocross area in a normal setup with the tyres heated to the desired temperature. Each tyre compound was tested in five temperature "areas" (cooled down - start temp - optimum temp - hot - cooked).
After driving a few circles with the intent to get maximum grip values, I extracted the RAF data from the replays and viewed them in the "slip angle vs. lateral grip" graph of the RAF Tyre Extract tool. Finally, I noted them down and plotted them to the excel sheet graphs, modifying the values (within reason) to produce nice curves.
The cars used for the values were: R1: FOX, R2-R4: FZR, Road Super: FZ50. Please do note that the R1 graph would've probably looked somewhat different if I had the chance to mount them to the FZR, my guess is it would've been about 0.05g "lower".
Update:
I've now made some tests on the FOX with R2 and R3 tyres, and from the difference to FZR's tyres I was able to estimate how R1 tyres would grip on a FZR, making the R1 curve actually useful. The grip difference is 0.09g to exact. Also at the new test, the R1 tyres didn't seem that peaky anymore, flattening the curve somewhat (read: R1 tyres have less grip falloff when too cold/hot now).
Enough talking, here's the graph:
As I've done in the last thread, I cannot stress enough that these values are all taken by eye and feel and might not represent LFS' real behaviour 100%.
The procedure to take the values was driving around the autocross area in a normal setup with the tyres heated to the desired temperature. Each tyre compound was tested in five temperature "areas" (cooled down - start temp - optimum temp - hot - cooked).
After driving a few circles with the intent to get maximum grip values, I extracted the RAF data from the replays and viewed them in the "slip angle vs. lateral grip" graph of the RAF Tyre Extract tool. Finally, I noted them down and plotted them to the excel sheet graphs, modifying the values (within reason) to produce nice curves.
The cars used for the values were: R1: FOX, R2-R4: FZR, Road Super: FZ50. Please do note that the R1 graph would've probably looked somewhat different if I had the chance to mount them to the FZR, my guess is it would've been about 0.05g "lower".
Update:
I've now made some tests on the FOX with R2 and R3 tyres, and from the difference to FZR's tyres I was able to estimate how R1 tyres would grip on a FZR, making the R1 curve actually useful. The grip difference is 0.09g to exact. Also at the new test, the R1 tyres didn't seem that peaky anymore, flattening the curve somewhat (read: R1 tyres have less grip falloff when too cold/hot now).
Enough talking, here's the graph: