If this is to me, I’m running 245F and 255R Michelin Pilot Sport 4S, a relatively square setup with a reportedly decent tire.Most OEM stuff is set up to heavily understeer, as it's deemed safer than neutral or oversteer. Oversteer "seems" like more fun, but that's when it's in a controlled environment or when you are expecting it. With my car, the weight of the car and the brakes easily overpowered the dinky 225 wide tires. If you are staggered, you are probably going to understeer significantly. Moving to a wider or square setup with the front tires may help this get closer to neutral, as well as other things mentioned, like swaybars.
Crappy OEM tires plus these pretty crappy OEM widths leads to poor turning traction, when the weight of the car is substantial. These cars *should* have at least 255 all around IMO and from there maybe 275 or 285 in the hottest version.
Also, I’m not complaining about understeer or oversteer. I’m trying to figure out what system is electromechanically altering this balance in the middle of a steady state corner with steering held constant and throttle held constant and all nannies (that I can think of) turned off. It’s like Lane Keep Assist, or torque vectoring, or something, is unnecessarily imposing input into the event in a very regular, even time pattern, seriously degrading the car’s capability.
 
	
 
 
		 
 
		







 
 