TIRE MYTHS
(courtesy
Goodyear Tire Engineering. -
1. - I should inflate my tires according
to the pressure indicated on the tire
sidewall?
The handwriting's not on the wall the tire
sidewall, that is. The tire's
maximum inflation pressure not the recommended is molded on the
sidewall. For normal operation, follow inflation pressure recommendations
in the owner's manual or on the vehicle placard located in
the glove box or on the door post. The
function of air in a tire is to support the weight-carrying potential
of a vehicle, according to Bill Egan, chief engineer of Goodyear
advanced product design. (Attribute all answers to Egan.. - Thus,
tires are built and rated to carry certain
load capacities, and automakers
select those sizes compatible with the ride, handling, traction,
fuel economy and load requirements of their vehicles. Vehicle manufacturers
determine inflation pressures based on these requirements.
2. - A tread pattern is needed to provide
great traction on dry roads.
A racing slick a tire without any tread provides
the ultimate in dry traction
due to the maximum amount of rubber touching the road. A tread pattern,
with its groove voids, actually impairs this adhesion capability on
dry roads. Tire tread acts as a squeegee on wet roads to remove water
from under the tire and channel it through
the grooves for improved wet traction.
That's why Goodyear Aquatred IIs directional, AquaChannel TM
tread design grabbed so much attention
literally on rain-slick roads and
otherwise when it was introduced.
3. - If not for the cost, race tires
would be the ideal street tire for high-performance
vehicles.
Race tires are engineered for specific track
surfaces and race vehicle suspensions.
On a high-performance vehicle, race tires would wear too quickly,
provide an uncomfortable ride and deliver poor handling on wet or
icy roadways. But in many cases, the technology used at the racetrack
is engineered into high-performance street
tires. For example, ultra-high-performance
tires, such as Goodyear's new Eagle F1 Steel, employ
a stiffer carcass and aggressive tread compounds to provide the performance
attributes required for high-performance vehicles.
4. - Performance tires wear out faster
because of the sticky compounds.
Performance tires may wear out faster than
conventional family-car tires;
however, tread rubber polymers aren't the culprits. In fact, new polymers
and ultra-tensile steel constructions are making performance tires
last longer than ever. Industry-wide, performance tires average about
45,000 miles in tread life, similar to the figures for family-car
passenger tires. Fast wear usually is due to
high-horsepower vehicles fitted with
the tires and aggressive driving. Jackrabbit starts and quick
stops can shorten the life of any tire.
5. - Wide tires provide better traction
under all weather conditions. In
fact, putting oversized snow
tires on a car delivers better snow traction.
In fact, the opposite is true. Wide tires tend to
'float' on deep snow and the
tread lugs never have a chance to 'dig' through the snow to the road
surface to gain traction. Narrow tires are a better option in deep
snow. The tire acts similar to a knife
cutting through butter; the blade works
best when using the narrow edge to push through the butter rather
than the wide flat side of the blade.
6. - All-season tires are so good that
winter tires are never needed.
In some parts of the country this may be true, but
if you live in the northern-most
states or in Canada, the traction provided by winter tires can't
be beat. Winter tires reign supreme in rural areas where snow remains
on the road for days. They provide 25 percent improved traction in
deep snow over all-season tires. Metal-studded tires deliver up to 40
percent greater traction on
hard-packed snow and ice over all-seasons.
7. - Never rotate tires from side to
side, only front to back.
Radial tires can be crossed from side to side in
the rotation pattern. The old
front-to-back rule applied to bias ply tires. Regular tire rotation
every 6,000 to 8,000 miles promotes more uniform wear for all
tires on a vehicle. Goodyear recently designed a light truck tire
system that requires no rotation, the
Wrangler RF-A, which provides a rear
tire with a different tread design from the front tire.
8. - Put your new tires on the
drive-wheel position to get the most traction.
This is only true on a rear-wheel-drive vehicle.
In all cases, install new
tires on the rear axle. Most tire buyers purchase new rubber for the
drive-wheel position to get the most
traction; however, by doing so, they transfer
most of their traction capabilities from the rear and make it susceptible
to oversteer. The vehicle's rear will fishtail and swing out in
fast cornering or emergency maneuvers.
9. - Sticking your fingernail in the
tread can help pick the tire with the softest
compounds, and thus, the best adhesion.
It's sort of like kicking the tire, but with
another part of the anatomy.
Tread compounds only tell part of a tire's story. Tread pattern,
tire shape and the tire footprint shape on the pavement provide clues
to its adhesion capabilities. Don't rely on the fingernail test.
10. - The government tests tires for
traction, temperature resistance and treader
and assigns grades that are molded onto the sidewall.
Uniform Tire Quality Grading is a federal law that
requires tire manufacturers to
grade their tires for treader, traction and temperature resistance.
Tire manufacturers, not the government, test tires and assign
their own grades. Unfortunately, the government has not prescribed
a formula for converting the manufacturers test results into grades;
therefore the numbers are not objective. According to the Federal
Trade Commission, treader grades are for comparison purposes only
and are not intended to be converted into
anticipated or promised tire mileage.
11. - Tires are made of a single rubber
compound.
Several polymers are used in a tire, depending on
their performance characteristics.
Run-flat tires, for example, use heat-dissipating polymer
reinforcements that stiffen tire sidewalls, while tread compounds
affect traction, treader, rolling resistance
and noise. In the case of the Eagle
F1 Steel ultra-high-performance tire, its AATRAX triple polymer tread
compound system provides improved handling and wet and dry traction
without sacrificing treader, snow
traction, rolling resistance or noise.
12. - Well-engineered tires will overcome
deficiencies in the vehicle.
Even premium tires can show signs of premature or
uneven treader and imprecise
steering when vehicles have defective alignment or suspension parts.
Correct vehicle alignment is a must and should be checked periodically.
Improper alignment causes excessive tire wear as well as increases
fuel consumption. Regular tire rotation about every 6,000 to 8,000
miles promotes more uniform wear for all tires on a vehicle.
13. - An ultra-low rolling resistant tire
provides outstanding fuel economy.
A tire engineered for low rolling resistance would
provide horrible fuel economy
when it is run under inflated. Running tires 20 percent under inflated
by 6 to 7 pounds per square inch wastes fuel usage by as much
as 10 percent. That amounts to Americans wasting nearly 4 million
gallons of gasoline daily. Tire care is
crucial in saving money at the pump.
14. - An undulation on a tire sidewall is
a weak spot that could lead to tire
failure.
An undulation is created where materials overlap
each other in the tire carcass,
and it actually is the strongest part of the tire. Still, motorists
perceive a 'wave' on the sidewall as a defect. Goodyear's new
ultra-tensile steel reinforcement eliminates this material splice and
overlap. Ultra-tensile steel should reduce
sidewall undulations found in polyester
reinforced tires.
15. - Tires are a low-tech commodity, and
price should determine what to buy.
Consider the rain, run-flat and performance tires
on the market today. Time and
technology have improved the quality and value of today's tires. Price
should be only one consideration, along with the other factors that
can enhance tire value and vehicle handling. For the industry, average
passenger tire life has climbed from 24,000 miles in 1973 to about
47,000 miles today. No one would want to turn back the clock on tire
developments or prices. On a cost-per-mile basis, tires from the so-called
'good old days' would cost more than three times that of the 65,000-mile
warranted Goodyear Aquatred II radial tire.
16. - Before you buy a car, kick the
tires.
It might not tell you much about the vehicle or
tires, but it could tell you
whether your shoe padding is adequate.
© Copyright -
Goodyear Tire Engineering
Used With Permission
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