Smokes wrote:Sterling distort due to the welding but I doubt it alloys are easier to buckle hence why the are heavier. Cast wheels have the rim profile rolled to shape if I remember correctly. Matching would be a waste of material and time and would cause the material to crack. With regards to brakes what wrong with ducting them properly using race pads and brake fluid with braid hoses. As long as you keep the steel brakes cool they should not fade. And cheaper than fitting heavier discs
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Cast alloy wheels are cast and then machined round, and to be able to cast them you need a certain wall thickness, that's why cheap alloys can be heavier than steel wheels. Steel wheels are roll formed from sheet steel and then welded, a steel wheel hence have a very low thickness which will give a lower weight at the cost of stiffness. Aluminum alloys designed for casting are also not as strong as those designed for forging, but unless the steel wheel is made from some higher strength grade I would suspect the strength to be about comparable. But the alloys used for casting is probably not as ductile as mild steel, which is why they tend to crack rather than buckle.
More expensive wheels are usually forged and then machined. The forged alloy is stronger and more extensive machining means the weight can be kept down.
MOWOG wrote:The general marketplace does not care. It demands 18+ inch alloys. Volkswagen does offer a very attractive "retro" steel wheel with hubcap on its new New Beetle, but again, that is there due to styling and marketing decisions rather than engineering requirements.
I notice when I take my Miata to track days that most of the serious racers run on 13" wheels, because they offer the lowest combined tire and wheel weights, and on a Miata, unsprung weight is critical. And I would point out that F1 runs 13" wheels and is able to stuff brakes inside them that generate up to 5 g's of stopping force. If you require more than 5 g's on your street car, you are very stout street racer indeed!
F1 runs 13" wheels because that is what the regulation demands.
That they can reach 5G during braking is due to aerodynamic drag (1G) and the excellent grip due to high downforce. Since a car is very lightweight, and since part of the energy is lost as drag you can make do with some very small carbon/carbon brakes given that the brakes use forced cooling. This is very different to what you find among street cars.