Tire question/ suggestion for Ferrari FF | FerrariChat

Tire question/ suggestion for Ferrari FF

Discussion in 'FF/Lusso' started by Pinarello, Jan 9, 2015.

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  1. Pinarello

    Pinarello Karting

    Sep 20, 2013
    191
    Visalia
    Full Name:
    Roberto Gugig
    I have a Ferrari FF that I use as daily driver in California, currently has 20,000 miles and back tires are ready to change and front tired need change soon ( per dealer)

    Should I stay with same Pirelli pzero ? Move to Michelin ? Would another tire provide daily use more durability and still good performance

    Open to suggestions as I need to purchase tired ASAP

    Thank you

    Roberto
     
  2. Entropy

    Entropy Formula 3
    Owner

    Jul 10, 2008
    2,149
    Your choices are pretty limited to PZero Pirellis or the MPSS.

    Frankly I've found the Pirellis to be very good; only tires we've had on the FF (we use SottoZero's in the winter).

    The "official" Pirelli's are an FF-specific spec, Tire Rack has them (and when I've ordered tires, they've asked for my VIN and confirmed it with my dealer - unsure if they still do that).

    If you are happy with the Pirellis I would stick with them, others I'm sure have alternate opinions (i.e. Michelin).
     
  3. Pinarello

    Pinarello Karting

    Sep 20, 2013
    191
    Visalia
    Full Name:
    Roberto Gugig
    How long have your tires lasted usually?
     
  4. eric

    eric Formula Junior

    Aug 3, 2001
    705
    Albion, CA
    20K miles is hella lotta miles for a Ferrari. I thought I was doing great getting almost 10K miles on the tires on our FF. Our 612 would barely make 6K, usually less.
     
  5. FFMAC

    FFMAC Formula Junior

    Jul 20, 2012
    397
    UK
    Full Name:
    Mac
    I have MPSS. Very happy with them. Changed the front at 12K miles and the rears at 15K.
     
  6. ttforcefed

    ttforcefed F1 World Champ
    Rossa Subscribed

    Aug 22, 2002
    19,257
    i went with Michelin when i put the f12 wheels on my ff
     
  7. Noblesse Oblige

    Noblesse Oblige F1 Veteran

    Nov 7, 2011
    6,114
    Three Places
    Here's another data point. My FF came with Bridgestone S001 even though the sticker said PZero. The Bridegstones are excellent on traction wet and dry, turn in, braking, and good ride comfort and low noise. But the rears are gone at 7000 miles. I am getting MPSS. I have excellent all around experience with them.
     
  8. Whoopsy

    Whoopsy Formula Junior

    Dec 6, 2012
    834
    Vancouver, BC
    MPSS works better in the dry and warm weather, they don't degrade much at high temperature.

    PZeros sacrifice high temperature grip and dry grip for better wet grip and low temperature grip.

    Bridgestone is the occasional 3rd supplier that I haven't seen put on the car outside of Noblesse's car.

    Your tire choice depends on what kind of weather you plan on driving the car in.
     
  9. rmitchell248

    rmitchell248 Formula 3

    May 26, 2013
    1,071
    Nürburg
    Full Name:
    Robert


    Can you post a photo of your car with the f12 rims on it?
     
  10. DK308

    DK308 F1 Rookie

    Aug 13, 2013
    2,738
    Europe, way north.
    Full Name:
    AB
    Is this your personal experience, or is this something you know to be technical fact?

    I ask because I actually find it to be the other way around. Granted, I'm not an FF owner, but on my cars with MPSS and PZero, I find the MPSS to be more forgiving, in need of less warmup and better in the wet. I generally think it's a better all around tyre. I would guess that the PZero would have an edge if you tracked a car with both and made a comparison.

    Just my 2c
     
  11. Whoopsy

    Whoopsy Formula Junior

    Dec 6, 2012
    834
    Vancouver, BC
    I have had both in quite a few of my cars and chats with Porsche engineers and McLaren personals about tires. My experiences coincide with their opinions.

    Supersport is a great upgrade over the PS2s, it is better in every possible way, but Michelin kept the same trait in their compound selection, the MPSS is awesome in the wet if you compared with the PS2, but the PZeros just had that little bit more bite in cooler weather and the tread pattern is more conductive of evade water over MPSS.

    For most people, the MPSS is one of the best tires to have. Good enough in the cold and wet and awesome when in operating temperature.
     
  12. justthebest

    justthebest Formula Junior

    May 14, 2014
    319
    Denver, CO
    I've always preferred MPSS' over Pirellis, mostly due to their comparable high-performance characteristics with the comfort edge going to the MPSS'.
     
  13. PhilNotHill

    PhilNotHill Two Time F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Jul 3, 2006
    27,855
    Aspen CO 81611
    Full Name:
    FelipeNotMassa
    My understanding is that Ferrari uses MPSS for all published performance tests.
     
  14. rjn21

    rjn21 Karting

    Dec 3, 2013
    199
    UK
    Pirelli have a close contractual relationship with F. Whilst of course there would never be any illegal anti-competitive contractual restrictions (...), it is interesting to note that any Pilota course car "cannot" be run with Michelin tyres according to the course personnel.
     
  15. RickLederman

    RickLederman F1 Rookie
    Rossa Subscribed

    Sep 18, 2007
    2,837
    Swanton Ohio
    Full Name:
    Rick Lederman
    PS2's are very slippery when not heated up, scared the hell out of me a few times in my California. I know, I've had Ferraris with PS2's and PZero's. The PS2's last MUCH longer but if you are driving a modern Ferrari you should not care how long they last! PZero's stick far better when not heated up. The front's on my FF wear very bad on the inside edge, from showing off the braking ability from 160 mph to zero I think :D. So, I will stick with the PZero's for summer and SottoZero's for the snowy NW Ohio winter.
     
  16. Noblesse Oblige

    Noblesse Oblige F1 Veteran

    Nov 7, 2011
    6,114
    Three Places
    The Bridgestones must be very rare. The manual doesn't even list tire pressures for them.
     
  17. Whoopsy

    Whoopsy Formula Junior

    Dec 6, 2012
    834
    Vancouver, BC
    Or your car was a counterfeit and that's why it didn't come with proper tires. Haha.
     
  18. Noblesse Oblige

    Noblesse Oblige F1 Veteran

    Nov 7, 2011
    6,114
    Three Places
    I wondered about that. The seat belt extenders still work at 7000 miles ... heh heh.
     
  19. Whoopsy

    Whoopsy Formula Junior

    Dec 6, 2012
    834
    Vancouver, BC
    Damn!, the plastic hook/pusher still there too? God, has to be a Japanese copy then. No wonder you have Japanese tires. LOL
     
  20. Noblesse Oblige

    Noblesse Oblige F1 Veteran

    Nov 7, 2011
    6,114
    Three Places
    #20 Noblesse Oblige, Jan 13, 2015
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    . found this under the rear floor mat -- a real head scratcher
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  21. rmitchell248

    rmitchell248 Formula 3

    May 26, 2013
    1,071
    Nürburg
    Full Name:
    Robert

    He's probably getting 40 mph too.
     
  22. Noblesse Oblige

    Noblesse Oblige F1 Veteran

    Nov 7, 2011
    6,114
    Three Places
    You mean 40 mpg? No but it does get 19mpg :)
     
  23. Whoopsy

    Whoopsy Formula Junior

    Dec 6, 2012
    834
    Vancouver, BC
    19? I think I am doing 9.

    You better check under the hood to see if half the cylinders are fake.
     
  24. Noblesse Oblige

    Noblesse Oblige F1 Veteran

    Nov 7, 2011
    6,114
    Three Places
    Only half of them are on half the time.
     
  25. Whoopsy

    Whoopsy Formula Junior

    Dec 6, 2012
    834
    Vancouver, BC

    A V3? Amazing.





    To OP, sorry to hijack your thread and make it go OT. But can't resist to have some fun with Noblesse :)
     

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