wow...
well i have 4.30's in my n/a i assume there not lsd.. i also picked up a set of 3.91's out of an 88turbo i need better gas millage..
i will be dong a dyno and a 1/4 mile time with the 4.30's and one with the 3.91s so i can get a sense to how much power differnce it is..
as for the tires...
if you have a contact patch of say 4 inches by 9 inches you have roughly 36 square inches touching the ground
while if you keep the same tire size compound and company. and just went wider tire. you will have 4 inches by 11 inches, 44"s touching the ground..
now any one that knows any thing about friction can tell you this. the more Sa you have the more friction you have.
now if you inflate the tires you will lose traction and if you deflate the tires you will hook up better.
more friction = better traction ,
but yes there are tons of things that apply; compound, width, height, rim size, gears, power band ( might find a tire that grips great with your torqe form the hole, but when you stomp on it at speeds you find it breaks traction), tread patterns. road conditions(wet, cold, hot, dry, rough road, cement, brand new paved road, tar coated smooth road.) road and tire temprature, tire pressure, the rollout of the tire allso has play,
as for top fuel draggsters.. their the shit and when you start to talk about them.. it's a hole new ball park,
top fuelers have such traction proplems that they slip tripple plated clutches.. half way down the track...
for any one who knows how to launch there car knows that some wheel spin is good, but to much is worse, then none, just like the idea of abs breaking, have some tire slip but not alot, while at the same time as breaking as hard as possible, traction controll is the oposite, designed to limit torqe and engine power , but only enough to keep with in target slip rate. it has been proven that rought 10pecent sliprate will give you both the best breaking, and the best traction possible
so in other words.. if you can learn how to feather the throttle and only get a good screach from the tires or chirps when you shift, and your not laying down strips of rubber each time you race you will launch harder, accelerate faster, and be more consistant.
one last thing..
i do alot of driving, and have purchased alot of used tires, different compounds and width's,
in the rain, a skinner tire will do better since there is more force per squar inch, then a wider tire in the rain, so put wide tires on a light rwd vehical and slide in the rain,
while in snow the same wider tire helps prevent wheel slipage.
in the sand, the wider tire along with less air pressure keeps you afloat on the sand.
hope this makes sense to some of you, and i hope others agree..