Menu

2026 AutoBild Track Day Tyre Test

Jonathan Benson
Data analyzed and reviewed by Jonathan Benson
8 min read
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Dry
  3. Long Run
  4. Wet
  5. Results
  6. Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS
  7. Vitour Tempesta P1
  8. Nankang Sportnex CR S
  9. Yokohama Advan A052
  10. Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R

Auto Bild Sportscars tested five semi-slick track tyres in sizes 275/35 R19 and 285/30 R20, fitted to a BMW M2. The standard Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 (with BMW marking) was used as a baseline reference, and a Pirelli slick was included as an out-of-competition comparison. Testing took place at Vizzola and Nardò in Italy, covering wet handling, wet braking, dry braking, hot lap, and a six-lap long run to assess durability.

Test Publication:
275/35 R19 5 tyres 2 categories
Images courtesy of Auto Bild
Test Publication:
Auto Bild
Images courtesy of Auto Bild
Test Size: 275/35 R19
Tyres Tested: 5 tyres
Test Categories:
2 categories (5 tests)
Similar Tests

The Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS, developed specifically for the BMW M2 CS, took the win with the best dry performance across the board and strong long-run consistency. The biggest surprise was the Vitour Tempesta P1 from China, which finished second - only a second off the Pirelli on the hot lap and solid in both wet and dry conditions. The Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R, the most expensive tyre in the test at over 2000 euros per set, disappointed with a lack of outright grip and poor long-run durability, finishing joint fourth. The Yokohama Advan A052 dominated the wet tests by a wide margin but faded in the dry long run due to its very soft compound. The full slick proved surprisingly close to the Trofeo RS on a single hot lap but was slower than several semi-slicks over longer stints, as the BMW's ABS could not cope with the extreme grip levels.

Dry

The Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS stopped shortest from 100 km/h, more than two metres ahead of the baseline Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2. The testers noted that the Pirelli's ABS integration was noticeably better than the rest of the field - a result of its specific development on the BMW M2. The Yokohama Advan A052, the strongest wet performer, was the weakest semi-slick here, its soft compound feeling spongy under hard braking. The full slick was slowest of all - its extreme grip overwhelmed the ABS, causing a cycle of locking and releasing that added over five metres to its stopping distance.

Dry Braking

Spread: 5.24 M (18.2%)|Avg: 30.81 M
Dry braking in meters (Lower is better)
Dry Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

On the 6.2 km Nardò handling circuit, the Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS was the fastest semi-slick, only 0.86 seconds behind the full slick, standing out for precise turn-in and a wide, predictable limit. The Vitour Tempesta P1 was just one second off the Pirelli, showing good stability at both axles - a strong result for a Chinese-made tyre in this company. The Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R, developed for the heavier M4 CSL, felt too hard on the M2, producing occasional understeer and finishing well off the pace. The Yokohama posted a similar time to the Michelin but felt somewhat too soft according to the testers. The Nankang CR-S was slowest of the ranked tyres, though the entire semi-slick field was covered by just 2.35 seconds.

Dry Handling

Spread: 3.21 s (2.2%)|Avg: 149.63 s
Dry handling time in seconds (Lower is better)
  1. Reference Slick Ref
    147.67 s
  2. Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS
    148.53 s
  3. Vitour Tempesta P1
    149.56 s
  4. Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R
    150.09 s
  5. Yokohama Advan A052
    150.11 s
  6. Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 Ref
    150.58 s
  7. Nankang Sportnex CR S
    150.88 s

Long Run

The long run covered six laps of the 6.2 km Nardò circuit at 80% pace, roughly equivalent to 20 laps of the Sachsenring in terms of tyre stress as Nardò is long and high grip. The Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS was fastest on every lap from the second onwards - it looked worn by the end but felt stable and fast throughout, with good feedback and little movement. The Vitour Tempesta P1 was similarly quick, though it developed more movement at both axles in the final two laps. The Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R never matched the pace of the front-runners despite its harder compound, and suffered heavy pick-up from lap two. The Nankang CR-S and standard Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 had similar pick-up problems. The Yokohama Advan A052, despite being the softest tyre, handled rubber pick-up surprisingly well. The full slick was the opposite of its hot lap result - it never found consistent pace, struggling with understeer and oversteer throughout.

Dry Handling Long Run — Raw Data

3 Apr 2026
Average long run time in seconds (Lower is better)
Lap 1Lap 2Lap 3Lap 4Lap 5Lap 6
Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS 15:42
161.00s+11.70
149.30s
149.70s+0.40
151.00s+1.70
151.10s+1.80
152.00s+2.70
Vitour Tempesta P1 15:42
162.00s+11.70
150.30s
150.70s+0.40
151.80s+1.50
151.40s+1.10
152.50s+2.20
Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 Ref 15:42
166.30s+13.60
152.70s
152.70s
153.40s+0.70
154.10s+1.40
154.40s+1.70
Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R 15:43
161.10s+5.80
155.30s
155.70s+0.40
156.40s+1.10
157.40s+2.10
157.70s+2.40
Nankang Sportnex CR S 15:43
162.40s+6.60
155.80s
156.80s+1.00
156.90s+1.10
156.70s+0.90
155.90s+0.10
Yokohama Advan A052 15:43
164.10s+9.10
165.00s+10.00
155.80s+0.80
155.00s
156.90s+1.90
157.10s+2.10
Reference Slick Ref 15:43
164.40s+8.20
156.40s+0.20
156.20s
157.10s+0.90
157.00s+0.80
157.40s+1.20

Wet

In wet braking from 100 km/h, the baseline Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 - the tyre with the most tread grooves - stopped shortest, with the Yokohama Advan A052 just 0.2 metres behind. The Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R and Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS both suffered from a water wedge forming under the contact patch, unsettling the ABS on the initial brake input and adding several metres. The slick needed more than double the distance of the best semi-slick.

Wet Braking

Spread: 66.80 M (142.1%)|Avg: 59.83 M
Wet braking in meters (100 - 0 km/h) (Lower is better)
Wet Braking: Safety Impact: Best vs Worst Tyre

The Yokohama Advan A052's soft compound, which hurt its dry braking, paid off in the wet. It was ten seconds faster than the next semi-slick over the 2.8 km Vizzola wet handling course - a gap the testers did not expect, especially on a Pirelli test facility. The Nankang and Vitour were close behind each other in second and third, the Nankang offering the better balance of the two. The Pirelli and Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R both offered safe handling with controllable oversteer, but began to aquaplane about 10 km/h sooner than the Yokohama - the Pirelli's dry-condition strengths in turn-in and grip did not carry over to the wet. Despite being semi-slicks, all five ranked tyres completed the wet course without difficulty.

Wet Handling

Spread: 24.93 s (19.3%)|Avg: 138.23 s
Wet handling time in seconds (Lower is better)
  1. Yokohama Advan A052
    129.17 s
  2. Nankang Sportnex CR S
    133.96 s
  3. Vitour Tempesta P1
    134.01 s
  4. Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R
    138.49 s
  5. Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS
    138.55 s
  6. Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 Ref
    139.31 s
  7. Reference Slick Ref
    154.10 s

Results

The Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS won overall on the strength of its dry performance, which carries 80% of the total weighting. The Vitour Tempesta P1 was the standout value option in second place, while the Yokohama Advan A052's wet dominance was not enough to offset its dry-condition weaknesses, leaving it tied for fourth with the much more expensive Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R.

1st

Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS

275/35 R19 99Y
Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS
  • EU Label: D/B/B
  • Weight: 50.3 kgs
  • Price: 1513.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 1st 28.8 M 100%
Dry Handling 1st 148.53 s 100%
Dry Handling Long Run 1st 152.35 s 100%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 4th 53.3 M 47.2 M +6.1 M 88.56%
Wet Handling 5th 138.55 s 129.17 s +9.38 s 93.23%
2nd

Vitour Tempesta P1

275/35 R19 99Y
Vitour Tempesta P1
  • EU Label: D/B/B
  • Weight: 56.2 kgs
  • Price: 1576.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 3rd 30.26 M 28.8 M +1.46 M 95.18%
Dry Handling 2nd 149.56 s 148.53 s +1.03 s 99.31%
Dry Handling Long Run 2nd 153.12 s 152.35 s +0.77 s 99.5%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 3rd 51.9 M 47.2 M +4.7 M 90.94%
Wet Handling 3rd 134.01 s 129.17 s +4.84 s 96.39%
3rd

Nankang Sportnex CR S

275/35 R19 99Y
Nankang Sportnex CR S
  • EU Label: D/C/B
  • Weight: 54 kgs
  • Price: 1620.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 4th 30.7 M 28.8 M +1.9 M 93.81%
Dry Handling 5th 150.88 s 148.53 s +2.35 s 98.44%
Dry Handling Long Run 4th 157.42 s 152.35 s +5.07 s 96.78%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 2nd 50.1 M 47.2 M +2.9 M 94.21%
Wet Handling 2nd 133.96 s 129.17 s +4.79 s 96.42%
4th

Yokohama Advan A052

275/35 R19 99Y
Yokohama Advan A052
  • EU Label: D/B/B
  • Weight: 49.5 kgs
  • Price: 1612.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 5th 30.98 M 28.8 M +2.18 M 92.96%
Dry Handling 4th 150.11 s 148.53 s +1.58 s 98.95%
Dry Handling Long Run 5th 158.98 s 152.35 s +6.63 s 95.83%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 1st 47.2 M 100%
Wet Handling 1st 129.17 s 100%
4th

Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R

275/35 R19 99Y
Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R
  • EU Label: D/D/B
  • Weight: 47.8 kgs
  • Price: 2074.00
Test # Result Best Diff %
Dry Braking 2nd 29.99 M 28.8 M +1.19 M 96.03%
Dry Handling 3rd 150.09 s 148.53 s +1.56 s 98.96%
Dry Handling Long Run 3rd 157.27 s 152.35 s +4.92 s 96.87%
Test # Result Best Diff %
Wet Braking 5th 55.5 M 47.2 M +8.3 M 85.05%
Wet Handling 4th 138.49 s 129.17 s +9.32 s 93.27%

comments powered by Disqus