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  • #46
    So my Stage 2 was all put in a few days back, as well as H&R Coilovers as well.


    I dropped the car in first thing Monday morning, and was hoping to pick it up in the afternoon, but the workshop ran into a slight delay with the HP exhaust. Basically, the HP APR exhaust was designed and constructed a few years back before Polo GTI had the option for Factory HID's, and so with cars that have the HID's there's a small bracket that must be fabricated for the exhaust install so that it doesn't affect the HID leveler's or something.


    Anyway picked it up Tuesday morning, the sound (right now at least) is perfect. Deeper on idle and day to day driving but not overboard and screaming after market. When you put your foot down though, (and combined with the HP intake) the sound is just awesomely addictive.
    Overally very happy with it.


    Power wise, haven't had too much of a chance to play with it as I've most been driving in peak traffic or low speed limit roads. Beside the software for the new exhaust files, it will probably take the ECU a few days to adapt to the new intake anyway.


    Coilovers are great. I got them from Frank at Orange Tuning. Price is obviously much (much) better than local, however if ordering from Frank just be aware that he uses DHL Global Mail. Not to be confused with the yellow DHL Express vans you see everywhere, DHL Global Mail is basically the slowest, least accountable way of delivering mail available.


    The package took exactly 2 MONTHS to arrive! Not only that, but despite having "tracking", the status never actually updates from it being departed, and calling DHL themselves is no good either. They offer to setup an investigation, but even that takes 4-6 weeks they say. From waht I've read I believe they send half the stuff by boat now which is why it takes so long.


    Besides that the ride is good, not as brutal as I thought it would be. Need to ge the front re-adjsuted a touch to go a bit lower.


    Will post pics soon but overall big week for teh little Polo. Very happy!
    Full APR Stage 2
    HP APR Exhaust | HP APR CAI | HP APR Intercooler | APR Tune

    Comment


    • #47
      Originally posted by jimmedy View Post
      On a related issue - 225/35R18 tyres are a huge PITA, just for reference. Very uncommon fitment. Often twice as much $ as a 225/40 in the exactly brand and model. Extra annoyingly, after searching through RTA website and PDF's on modification, 225/40 adds a bit too much diameter and while I'm sure I could adjust the suspension and drive them fine day to day, technically they'd be defectable and potentially void my insurance while I'm at it.

      The Conti Sport 3's that came with the car were approaching the wear indicators anyway with only 25,000 on them, before the blow out. I know they're sporty rubber but 25,000 just doesn't seem like enough. So I thought I'd try Michelin Pilot Super Sports.

      Of course, Michelin don't make a Super Sport in 225/35. Well - they do, they just don't sell it to Australia.
      Tempe Tyres in Sydney mysteriously has some. When I rang my local Bob Jane a second time to ask whether they could source them or at least come down a bit in price their quote I'd gotten earlier for 245's he confirmed Michelin don't bring them in themselves so Tempe probably have a parallel import and they are likely several year old stock, try at my own risk.

      Anyway 245/35 only adds 14mm diameter. Sneaking in 1mm under what's legal.... hopefully the Michelin PSS are all they're cracked up to be. Those will go on next Saturday.
      Are you referring to RMS VSI 09 Rev 4? If so you need to be careful about the diameter of an non OE wheel and tyre versus an OE wheel with a non OE tyre. Quote "The tyre and rim industry sets standards for the correct combinations of wheels and tyres", hence you have a strong case as long as the tyre and rim industry standard says that the tyre size that you select is appropriate. Considering the other mods on your car I'm surprised that voiding insurance is a consideration at all.

      FYI, 245/35/18 are a popular size, so I seriously doubt that "they are likely several year old stock". There are many tell tale signs of a tyre's age, labels, smell, mould release oil presence, overall appearance and most of all the serial Tyre Identification Number on the tyre (the last four digits of the serial TIN indicate the week and year that the tyre was made). I have used parallel import tyres on my cars for over 20 years, never had a problem.


      I think you'll like the Michelins, easily my favourite road tyre.


      Cheers
      Gary
      Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST

      Comment


      • #48
        Originally posted by Sydneykid View Post
        Are you referring to RMS VSI 09 Rev 4? If so you need to be careful about the diameter of an non OE wheel and tyre versus an OE wheel with a non OE tyre. Quote "The tyre and rim industry sets standards for the correct combinations of wheels and tyres", hence you have a strong case as long as the tyre and rim industry standard says that the tyre size that you select is appropriate. Considering the other mods on your car I'm surprised that voiding insurance is a consideration at all.

        FYI, 245/35/18 are a popular size, so I seriously doubt that "they are likely several year old stock". There are many tell tale signs of a tyre's age, labels, smell, mould release oil presence, overall appearance and most of all the serial Tyre Identification Number on the tyre (the last four digits of the serial TIN indicate the week and year that the tyre was made). I have used parallel import tyres on my cars for over 20 years, never had a problem.


        I think you'll like the Michelins, easily my favourite road tyre.
        I had to go and double check, but no, I was referring to the NCOP VSB - https://infrastructure.gov.au/roads/..._2011%20v3.pdf
        There’s material that certainly appears in both through. I’m in the ACT and I couldn’t find an ACT equivalent of the NSW one you linked, so I figured a National one was the next best thing.

        My wheels are the same diameter as OE, just half an inch wider (Audi ‘Rotors’ were 18x7.5, Momo ‘Europes’ are 18x8. OE Conti tyres went straight onto the new wheels after < 1000k’s.

        My last post might have been a bit confusing on my part –

        OE tyres (Conti Sport 3’s) are 225/35 – that turns out to be an annoying and expensive fitment.
        225/40 are near enough to half the price brand for brand, but sidewall height / total wheel diameter will be in breach of the regs.
        245/35 are only 7mm higher in the sidewall than OE, for a diameter increase of 14mm, sneaking in 1mm under regs. Despite your comment about popular size, I’ll concede 245/35 might be *more* common than 225/35 but still not super common and so there’s not much difference on price.

        At the end of the day, whether the 225 Michelins from Tempe would have been fine or not, after $80 to ship them to Canberra and then paying for a fit and balance, the price was near as makes no difference to what Bob Jane quoted for the 245mm Michelins fitted and balanced, and you also don’t get the local bloke offside the way you would turning up with your own tyres.

        FWIW – my car is still totally insured! I’ve made sure everything I’ve done is covered under the minor modifcations that don’t require engineering certificates.
        GIO Platinum doesn’t require you to list modifications and really only rules out adding turbos and superchargers. Conveniently my engine started out with both of those, heh heh, so I just have to make sure I’ve picked an agreed value I’m comfortable with :p

        Voiding warranty is one thing, driving around uninsured is another entirely!

        Things have been a bit hectic since the Melbourne trip, but once I've got the new rubber on this weekend I'll go park somewhere scenic and actually take a few pics of my ride.
        Last edited by jimmedy; 11-11-2015, 01:58 PM.
        2014 Audi A1 Sportback Sport
        APR Stage 2 - HP DQ200 DSG tune - Quaife DQ200 LSD - LuK RepSet 2CT clutch - VWR CAI - Wagner Competition FMIC - Milltek DP & resonated cat-back - HP F&R sways - Bilstein B14 coilovers - Tarox Sport Compact brake kit - GFB DV+ - Whiteline LCA bushings w/ +caster - SuperPro race dog bone insert - Fondmetal 9RR matt black 18x8" wheels - Michelin PSS 245/35R18 - gloss black RS honeycomb grille - OEM clear lensed LED tail lights

        Comment


        • #49
          Originally posted by HenryJr View Post
          What pressure were your running on the tyres out of interest?
          They were running about 40psi at ambient. Which is fine for my daily drive but possibly a bit ambitious for a hard drive on a winding mountain road....
          2014 Audi A1 Sportback Sport
          APR Stage 2 - HP DQ200 DSG tune - Quaife DQ200 LSD - LuK RepSet 2CT clutch - VWR CAI - Wagner Competition FMIC - Milltek DP & resonated cat-back - HP F&R sways - Bilstein B14 coilovers - Tarox Sport Compact brake kit - GFB DV+ - Whiteline LCA bushings w/ +caster - SuperPro race dog bone insert - Fondmetal 9RR matt black 18x8" wheels - Michelin PSS 245/35R18 - gloss black RS honeycomb grille - OEM clear lensed LED tail lights

          Comment


          • #50
            Originally posted by jimmedy View Post
            OE tyres (Conti Sport 3’s) are 225/35 – that turns out to be an annoying and expensive fitment.
            225/40 are near enough to half the price brand for brand, but sidewall height / total wheel diameter will be in breach of the regs.
            245/35 are only 7mm higher in the sidewall than OE, for a diameter increase of 14mm, sneaking in 1mm under regs. Despite your comment about popular size, I’ll concede 245/35 might be *more* common than 225/35 but still not super common and so there’s not much difference on price.
            Briefly;
            The price comment was in regards to the 225/40.

            In regards to overall diameter, the relevant section; 4.2.4 Overall Nominal Diameter
            The overall diameter of any tyre fitted to a passenger car or passenger car derivative must not be more than 15mm larger or 26mm smaller than that of any tyre designated by the vehicle manufacturer for that model.

            The 15 mm nominal increase is not relative to the OE tyre that your particular car came with, but any tyre fitted to that model as OE. So it may pay to check what sized tyre (and their diameter) are fitted to all A1 models.

            That reg always makes me laugh, new tyres have 8-9 mm of tread depth, 1.5 mm is considered the minimum acceptable, so replacing a just legal tyre with a brand new one could increase the diameter by 15 mm. Even more speedo error built in, as the tyre wears.

            I'll admit that I'm a bit sensitive when it comes to "Australia Tax" charging retailers, they lie through their teeth to steer buyers away from totally acceptable parallel imports. The "several year old stock" warning is a pretty poor attempt, hoping that the buyer doesn't know about serial TIN's on tyres.


            Cheers
            Gary
            Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by jimmedy View Post
              They were running about 40psi at ambient. Which is fine for my daily drive but possibly a bit ambitious for a hard drive on a winding mountain road....
              In the past I would be running as high as 36psi on the street. While this is great for fuel economy, it will tend to over heat the tyres to quick on the track. On the street now I use around 32psi on the front and 30psi on rear (factory recommended btw) and when on the track I use 28psi on the front and 27psi on rear. This can still change due to road temps.

              While your at it why not check out the price of some federal 595RS-R's. Great street and beginners track day tyre and should be half the price of euro tyres. They do a 245/35R18 tyre.
              2012 Fabia II VRS Estate - APR stage 2 tune, Custom 2.5" turbo back full stainless exhaust with ceramic coated dump pipe, Harding Performance Cold air intake, Wagner Tuning Competition Intercooler, GFB DV+ diverter valve, Braille B2317RP battery, Eibach pro kit springs, Bilstein B8 shocks, Harding Performance F+R ARB, Super Pro bushes, Porsche 986 Boxster S front brake calipers, 330x28mm front rotors, Ferodo DS2500 front pads and Remsa rear pads, Enkei RPF1 17x8 et.35 with 235/40R17 Yokohama AD08R tyres, Maxton front splitter and Superskoda fender flares.

              Comment


              • #52
                Originally posted by Sydneykid View Post
                Briefly;
                The price comment was in regards to the 225/40.

                In regards to overall diameter, the relevant section; 4.2.4 Overall Nominal Diameter
                The overall diameter of any tyre fitted to a passenger car or passenger car derivative must not be more than 15mm larger or 26mm smaller than that of any tyre designated by the vehicle manufacturer for that model.

                The 15 mm nominal increase is not relative to the OE tyre that your particular car came with, but any tyre fitted to that model as OE. So it may pay to check what sized tyre (and their diameter) are fitted to all A1 models.

                That reg always makes me laugh, new tyres have 8-9 mm of tread depth, 1.5 mm is considered the minimum acceptable, so replacing a just legal tyre with a brand new one could increase the diameter by 15 mm. Even more speedo error built in, as the tyre wears.

                I'll admit that I'm a bit sensitive when it comes to "Australia Tax" charging retailers, they lie through their teeth to steer buyers away from totally acceptable parallel imports. The "several year old stock" warning is a pretty poor attempt, hoping that the buyer doesn't know about serial TIN's on tyres.

                Cheers
                Gary
                No argument from me on any of the above!

                I definitely have the largest OE combo Audi sell on the A1, so 15mm more is it. But totally with you on the difference due to tread on a new set. On the way to Melb I went under the big digital speedo check and my own digital speedo at 100 read 98 on the overhead sign, on low tread. So fresh tread with my OE tyres should have been bang on accurate and these new tyres should have me running 2-3% over displayed speed, getting closer to dead on accurate as they wear.

                I hate Australia tax too, and believe me, if the dollar hadn't tanked so hard I'd be buying from Tirerack or Performancealloys, but now the freight rubs out the advantage.
                2014 Audi A1 Sportback Sport
                APR Stage 2 - HP DQ200 DSG tune - Quaife DQ200 LSD - LuK RepSet 2CT clutch - VWR CAI - Wagner Competition FMIC - Milltek DP & resonated cat-back - HP F&R sways - Bilstein B14 coilovers - Tarox Sport Compact brake kit - GFB DV+ - Whiteline LCA bushings w/ +caster - SuperPro race dog bone insert - Fondmetal 9RR matt black 18x8" wheels - Michelin PSS 245/35R18 - gloss black RS honeycomb grille - OEM clear lensed LED tail lights

                Comment

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