Originally posted by wai
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In theory, for maximum grip, you should lower your spring rate as you stiffen the tyre (+ reduce the damping to match this rate reduction) but in practise, the change in tyre compliance when changing tyres is small enough to ignore unless the profile is radically altered (in which case the suspension is likely to be changed quite radically anyway for the other reasons already discussed in previous posts). You MIGHT factor it in if you were running an open wheeled racing car with multiple sets of springs and antiroll bars and double or triple adjustable dampers if changing tyre brands.
F1 cars go the other direction by having such stiff suspension (to minimise camber changes due to roll + to maintain ground clearance due to downforce loading at high speeds) that the tyre compliance forms a major component of their suspension movement - most people would be shocked that F1 cars run 80 series profile tyres.
In the context of this thread where the OP has made a relatively small change in tyre profile, it is the other factors that have primarily affected the car - tyre compliance alone would only have made it react to steering a little faster and ride more harshly.
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