It's not just the rotation of the tire against the tarmac that puts heat into the tire, it's also the loading. If you double the tire count, you halve the loading on each individual tire. This is the reason that many heavy, but potentially fast saloon cars have speed limiters even though the same tire would be fine on a lighter sports car at considerably higher terminal velocities.Just_a_fan wrote:More tyres won't help with top speed if the tyres can't handle the speed in the first place.
Not what I read... but it was an old source that I likely couldn't cite.Just_a_fan wrote:Many of the heavy, fast saloons have limiters fitted because of an agreement to do so to keep the regulators happy. That's why German saloons are limited to 155mph. Other companies make those same cars, fitted with the same tyres, go much faster.
As you say, loading will put heat in tyres. It's not the only issue to consider in a high performance car.VARIANT | one wrote:Not what I read... but it was an old source that I likely couldn't cite.Just_a_fan wrote:Many of the heavy, fast saloons have limiters fitted because of an agreement to do so to keep the regulators happy. That's why German saloons are limited to 155mph. Other companies make those same cars, fitted with the same tyres, go much faster.
Either way, so you denying that loading puts heat into a tire?
Carbon fibre brakes plus full active aero.motobaleno wrote:many of you faced the problem of corner speed but I have not read much about braking...
how do you think >5g braking capabilities can be achieved?
I don't think anyone was saying that... though the consensus is that though the levels of aero could be achieved, streetable tires that could handle the cumulative loading of vehicle mass + aero loads would likely be the proverbial chink in the armor with respect to the concept of a road car that could outlap an F1 car. It might help if it's mentioned that tire failure in an unflawed tire is due to excessive heat buildup in the carcass, not structural failure under deformation due to loading. Tire grip (much like the function of brakes) is an exercise in thermal management due to mechanical forces, not the other way around.Just_a_fan wrote:As you say, loading will put heat in tyres. It's not the only issue to consider in a high performance car.
It's clear you don't understand how the track day specials from Ferrari, Mclaren, Aston Martin and select other companies work.FoxHound wrote:There was controversy over the GT3 Porsche and GTR Nissan running non spec tyres to attain their 'ring lap times a few years back.
If it's a case of "run what you brung", there is no chance for the AM.
If they resort to having 2 specifications of tyres, road and track, they solve a couple of problems but create new ones.
Is a car truly standard if it needs racing tyres that are useless on the road to be able to meet the makers claims?
You could get any number of exotics with 7m30 second lap times at the ring to cream the 7 minute barrier with racing slicks.
Drive it home though.
Or will the car come equipped with a resident mechanic to set pressures, fit tyres and carry out checks before your "average" AM-RB 001 owner takes to the track?
Or will it be left to the owner...drives car, corners at 3/4/5g, blows tyre, calls lawyer...
Will respective race tracks also equip these tyres or will the owner be expected to lug these with him?
Having used track day tyres, I can tell you the logistics are a real pain in the arse.
Or maybe this is just so fantastical, that owners will do it in much the same way they hunt big 7 game... even to this day.
Pay millions for the experience.
It would be as unfair on the industry as it is on game. Unfortunate comparison, my apologies. Gives you the gist though.
Not often you can say you lapped quicker than Hamilton round Silverstone.
And this is what you pay for however contorted the mechanism of getting there.
Red Bulls finger prints already evident!
Braking is primarily a traction problem and tyres were cited as probably the biggest problem for this project on page 1.motobaleno wrote:many of you faced the problem of corner speed but I have not read much about braking...
how do you think >5g braking capabilities can be achieved?