It looks like it might be raining, snowing, hailing... Which tires should I use?












ARCHIVE ALERT! This is a page for our old Enhanced Driving School. It is no
longer being maintained and remains accessible for archival purposes only.
Our driving school is now called Enhanced Driving Synergy and current info
can be found on it's new website drivingsynergy.com
:












If you're not trailering your car to and from the track, then you should perhaps be driving on the tires that best suit your general driving conditions. If it is snowing the day of the school, your snow tires will help you get safely to and from the track. However, your snow tires will get "eaten up" at the track if you are driving hard and the track surface is not snow-covered.
If you want to drive to the track on one set of tires and then drive on track on a different set, then of course you'll need your other set of tires already mounted, balanced, and properly inflated, tire bags or old blankets, you'll need to pack them in your back seat, passenger seat, truck, roof, mini-trailer, you'll need to bring your car jack, a jack stand or two, breaker bar, torque wrench, and various other items, such as pressure gauge, lock-nut adapter, lock-nut key, air pump, and so on...
We run our schools no matter the weather.
The only thing that stops a driving school is fog.
Check the weather, according to Environment Canada.
- Belleville or Trenton when we're going to Shannonville
- Oshawa or Peterborough when we're visiting Mosport
- Simcoe/Cayuga if we return to Toronto Motorsport Park

