If you have a balancer (I'm assuming spin and not bubble), then throw them on and put a coarse belt sander up against the tire and shave down your high spots.
Nope, bubble balancer. Wouldn't you know it a spinner showed up cheaply after I already had it. Still, no regrets until now.Burnouts? 1.6 NA? Surely you jest....
R.O.R writes: oh, they burn out... trust me.it may only be a 10' long 1 tire fryer, but its a burn out.. lol.my car also usually only spins one tire. whatever the lightest one is.. when its wet out, both spin. every friggen time. i hate driving my diesel in rain storms. even with brand new tires, and a fresh alignment, it hydroplanes with any amount of boost..Hydroplaning is a function of speed, tread depth and water depth is it not. Speed being the first variable you control and tread depth being the second. Mother nature takes care of the water depth for you. You just have to slow down, Boost has nothing to do with it. You could be under a boost condition at a slower speed and not plane out could you not? Although now that I think a bit it might be a torque thing as well and that is why they tell you not to drive with the Cruise Control on when it rains. The tires hit the water, slow down, the sensor picks up on the reduced speed and tries to compensate and wheeeee, away you go. Slip sliding away.
I would look to have the best treaded tires on the diesel then R.O.R. I think it may have to do with the torque we develop down in the lower RPM ranges or the additional amount applied at boost. Can't say that I can picture what a dyno graphs out for the addition a turbo gives. But I know that you sure know when it is being delivered. My son had a wicked Miata, well still has one that was so squirrely on up boost that he had to go to wider and softer/sticky tires. You might consider doing the same. Or snipe the ones you have if good on tread. Any thing to add that momentary grip you need to keep from snapping them free. Are we off topic yet?