It’s probably best the Sydney Dragway grandstands were empty during our testing, avoiding mass head-scratching as a car tried to do the opposite of the traditional action and slow as quickly as possible.

Our second dry exercise was again held beyond the 400 metres of extra-adhesion surfacing to ensure the tyres were being tested on a hotmix that has more in common with typical Aussie roads.

Having tested directional grip in the slalom, now the 10 sets of tyres were being tested for their performance under brakes – which in the Audi RS3’s case were proper bits of hardware. Eight-piston calipers up front with drilled discs are more than enough to shoulder the repeated hauls needed for this test.

Dry braking rear

That makes our 100km/h cruising-speed approach hugely relevant, with a coned gate marking the point where Luffy starts braking – and a line of equidistant cones providing a visual reference for the final resting points in addition to the Driftbox readings.

With ABS making emergency braking as easy as ABC – limiting tyre slide as Luffy stomps on the brake pedal – the only variables in this exercise stem from the tyres themselves: compound stickiness, tread pattern and material construction.

changing tyres
1

Those variables, though, were enough to put a full seven metres between the first-placed Dunlop (34.75m) – proving it had both impressive straight-line and directional grip following its slalom win – and the last-placed Nitto (41.75m).

Seven metres is nearly two car lengths. If Skippy had sat 40 metres ahead of the point of braking, the driver of a Nitto-shod RS3 isn’t the only one who’d have road kill in their bloodied lap. The Nexen and HiFly had respective stopping distances of 40.81m and 40.21 – starting to set a pattern for the performance of the cheaper tyres.

In a performance context, the Dunlop-tyred RS3 offers an advantage under brakes of 1.5 car lengths compared with the Audi hot-hatch when fitted with Nittos. Even the skid marks of the second-placed, German-but-made-in-the-Czech-Republic Continentals ended nearly two metres further down the track than those of the British-but-made-in-Germany Dunlops.

Braking hard

DRY BRAKING RESULTS

RankTyreMetres
1DUNLOP SPORT MAXX RT34.75
2CONTINENTAL CONTISPORTCONTACT 5P36.66
3MICHELIN PILOT SUPER SPORT37.10
4PIRELLI P ZERO37.50
5GOODYEAR EAGLE F1 ASYMMETRIC 337.67
6HANKOOK VENTUS S1 EVO238.19
7TOYO PROXES T1 SPORT39.39
8HIFLY HF805 CHALLENGER40.21
9NEXEN N FERA SU140.81
10NITTO INVO41.75

Never trying

We couldnt do it without…

Jax tyres

There was notable assistance, too, from Eagle SMF, who supplied the tyre changer machine the JAX Tyres team used to fit and remove all the tyres, using two sets of rims: one set being prepped while the other was on-track. If you need a change of boots for your car, check your options at www.jaxtyres.com.au – with full pricing transparency – and book an appointment online.

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