7C is waaaay too cold to be putting down any real power, whether you're in PZeros or not.
Boy, do I ever have a huge truckload of "THAT'S WHERE YOU'RE WRONG, KIDDO" for you.
To you:
QUOTE="salopian, post: 42843, member: 1200"]I don't think you can get nittos over here. Iv never herd of them before.[/QUOTE]
I will search around and see if Nittos are available in the United Kingdom
Forget the "gooey rubber as long as it's summer in Miami" tires. Get what I got in an identical climate to yours:
Nitto Motivo all season tires. 186 mph Y rated (not (Y) rated, as (Y) is OVER 186mph, though I am quite sure these tires can take anything this car can throw at them.
They grab harder,
now listen to this gents, they grab harder in the rain than the Sticky Mickeys did in the dry, in this climate, not-far-from-freezing, but not too uncomfortable to wear a puffy jacket outside.
These suckers bite the pavement like their doctor ordered them to make a buffet of every road they find, in a bit-above-freezing weather, wet or dry.
I'm running 42PSI. They corner like a train just wishes it could, and they take convincing to cut loose.
I don't plan on ever owning any more Mickeys. The only other tires I would consider are other all-season tires, with maybe a (Y) speed rating, you know, just in case the car happens to go WOT for 30 seconds.
If I can find wheels that are an exact clone of my stock wheels, but 11" wide, on the rear, I would go for some in 315 width, which, with proper offset, do not touch fenders, inner or outer.
These are excellent tires. 100 percent recommended for those whose climate spends a while every year below 68 degrees.