Motor Trend: GT500 vs SS drag race
#46
No doubt tires with more contact patch will result in less mph by the end of the 1/4 mile. It becomes a trade-off, and usually a good one, as you spend much more time in the first 10 ft of a track than the last 10 ft.
#47
Wider tires do not improve straight line traction. If you held pressure and compound equal the wider tire would end up with a contact patch that is shorter in the direction of longitudinal acceleration which decreases the traction. It does help for lateral acceleration. But, if your wider tire has a better compound then it could certainly improve your launch.
The assumption here is that pressure is being held equal, which it should not be.
Last edited by PacerX; 07-12-2009 at 10:27 AM.
#48
#49
Bull****.
The physics you're using to explain your point are far too simple to catch the nuances that make you incorrect.
I'm no physicist, and I certainly don't pretend to understand this, but the fact is, however, that wider tires provide more traction, even at the same diameter. Hopefully somebody smarter than I am can come in and explain.
The physics you're using to explain your point are far too simple to catch the nuances that make you incorrect.
I'm no physicist, and I certainly don't pretend to understand this, but the fact is, however, that wider tires provide more traction, even at the same diameter. Hopefully somebody smarter than I am can come in and explain.
Traction is tire on pavement. The wider the tire the more rubber touching the road's surface and thus more traction. END OF STORY.
#50
Increased wheel diameter is irrelevant to the size of the contact patch, but is not irrelevant to the amount of available traction. Have you ever seen a wrinkle-wall slick? On tires like that, a larger wheel would hinder the tire's ability to do its job. On regular street tires, the same effect is in place; just to a much less obvious degree.
For a given tire diameter, going wider shortens the length of the contact patch. Looking only at the most basic physics, it appears the total amount of rubber touching the road's surface does not change (the size of the contact patch should vary only with vehicle weight and tire pressure). That's what HAZ-Matt was saying, and he was claiming that because of that, there is no inherent traction advantage to a wider tire.
In practice, it's much more complicated than that. Everybody knows that all other things being equal, a wider tire gives more traction. As it turns out, both the shape and size of the contact patch change. See the link bossco provided above for the details.
#51
Increased tire diameter can give more traction, by increasing the length (front to back) of the contact patch.
Increased wheel diameter is irrelevant to the size of the contact patch, but is not irrelevant to the amount of available traction. Have you ever seen a wrinkle-wall slick? On tires like that, a larger wheel would hinder the tire's ability to do its job. On regular street tires, the same effect is in place; just to a much less obvious degree.
It's not the end of the story.
For a given tire diameter, going wider shortens the length of the contact patch. Looking only at the most basic physics, it appears the total amount of rubber touching the road's surface does not change (the size of the contact patch should vary only with vehicle weight and tire pressure). That's what HAZ-Matt was saying, and he was claiming that because of that, there is no inherent traction advantage to a wider tire.
In practice, it's much more complicated than that. Everybody knows that all other things being equal, a wider tire gives more traction. As it turns out, both the shape and size of the contact patch change. See the link bossco provided above for the details.
Increased wheel diameter is irrelevant to the size of the contact patch, but is not irrelevant to the amount of available traction. Have you ever seen a wrinkle-wall slick? On tires like that, a larger wheel would hinder the tire's ability to do its job. On regular street tires, the same effect is in place; just to a much less obvious degree.
It's not the end of the story.
For a given tire diameter, going wider shortens the length of the contact patch. Looking only at the most basic physics, it appears the total amount of rubber touching the road's surface does not change (the size of the contact patch should vary only with vehicle weight and tire pressure). That's what HAZ-Matt was saying, and he was claiming that because of that, there is no inherent traction advantage to a wider tire.
In practice, it's much more complicated than that. Everybody knows that all other things being equal, a wider tire gives more traction. As it turns out, both the shape and size of the contact patch change. See the link bossco provided above for the details.
Anyways, I know I'm right and it's useless for me to waste any more time in this thread.
#54
The tire's circumference doesn't change, but due to the sidewall flex issue I mentioned, the amount of traction does.
#55
For a given tire diameter, going wider shortens the length of the contact patch. Looking only at the most basic physics, it appears the total amount of rubber touching the road's surface does not change (the size of the contact patch should vary only with vehicle weight and tire pressure). That's what HAZ-Matt was saying, and he was claiming that because of that, there is no inherent traction advantage to a wider tire.
Everybody knows that all other things being equal, a wider tire gives more traction.
Sure, this is what everyone "knows" Sort of like everyone "knows" that cross drilled brake rotors are better for braking (except for people that actually race their cars). The problem is really that whenever someone upgrades to a wider tire they usually end up with either a softer compound or a more aggressive tread pattern or both just like practically everyone that upgrades to drilled rotors changes their brake pads to a more aggressive compound.
As it turns out, both the shape and size of the contact patch change. See the link bossco provided above for the details.
Just as some people on the board like to correct grammar (when 99% of the board doesn't care) I like to harp on wide tires for straight-line and even more so on cross drilled brake rotors.
Now back to GT500 v SS.
#56
I know I said I would stop but...
!!!!!
No it is IMPOSSIBLE if it has the same tire pressure as the narrower one. The shape has changed, not the area.
And I have no idea what PacerX is getting at. Are you supposed to drop the pressure in the tire when you go up a size? I suppose you could... I haven't read any recommendation about that... could someone PM me a link to a source if it exists so we don't waste more of this thread?
Actually if the compound and pressure is the same you probably get less straight line traction from the 21" even if the footprint is the same because the lower aspect ratio tends to reduce sidewall flex which hurts straight-line traction especially from a dig.
Ok I promise to be quiet about tires now.
No it is IMPOSSIBLE if it has the same tire pressure as the narrower one. The shape has changed, not the area.
And I have no idea what PacerX is getting at. Are you supposed to drop the pressure in the tire when you go up a size? I suppose you could... I haven't read any recommendation about that... could someone PM me a link to a source if it exists so we don't waste more of this thread?
HOWEVER, going form a 20" to 21" inch rim does NOT change the tire's overall circumference. While the 20" is 245/45ZR20 and the 21" is 245/40ZR21. Both tire's circumference are the SAME so you don't get any more traction!
Anyways, I know I'm right and it's useless for me to waste any more time in this thread.
Anyways, I know I'm right and it's useless for me to waste any more time in this thread.
Ok I promise to be quiet about tires now.
Last edited by HAZ-Matt; 07-14-2009 at 09:15 PM.
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