Ground Connection: Tires Have to a Lot to Do - Here's How They Do It - Tire Review Magazine

Ground Connection: Tires Have to a Lot to Do – Here’s How They Do It

For most customers, performance is all look. From the wheel to the sidewall to the tread itself, the tire and wheel package has to look sharp.

Lost in all of this focus on look is the actual performance of today’s performance tires. Not surprisingly, a lot of that starts and ends with the tread design.

On an average-size passenger car tire, the contact patch is about the size of a 4×6-inch postcard. In total, all four contact patches reach about the size of an 8×11-inch piece of paper. Depending on the size, the contact patch for a performance tire will be slightly larger.

Regardless, that’s precious little rubber-to-road contact, given that the primary purpose of the tread design is to transmit tractive forces, such as braking and cornering, from the vehicle to the street.

The second major purpose of the tread design is to provide grip. To pull this together a bit, think of traction as being the hypotenuse of a right triangle. Think of the legs of the triangle going through a corner. The bottom of the triangle (east-west) represents lateral force (encountered in a turn) and the north-south leg (vertical force) would be braking.

If you’re braking and turning, you are dealing with a tractive force (“tractive vector” in engineering terms). This is nothing more than the hypotenuse of the triangle rolling through the center of the contact patch.

Wear Patterns

Let’s look at this yet another way. Good tire techs can visually tell if the tread ribs and blocks are being unevenly worn in an east-west or side-to-side manner. They can also see a heel-and-toe wear pattern, which is more of a north-south phenomenon. All they have to do is rub their hand across the tread surface to feel the jagged, high and low points of heel-and-toe wear. By doing this, they can also tell if the tires have been flatspotted.

If the problem is heel-and-toe wear, tire techs can logically assume that the cause may have something to do with a worn shock absorber, a ball joint or a bearing that’s causing the tire to move forward and backward in the contact patch under braking. It’s the job of a tire tech to determine if the problem is a tire issue or a vehicle maintenance issue.

Imagine a tread design that doesn’t have uniform stress distribution going into the contact patch. That usually results in one rib carrying more load than another rib. Result: One rib will wear prematurely, especially during braking or accelerating.

Void Ratios and Noise

As they go about their work, tread designers must consider many things, not the least of which is balance. They also talk about such things as the wet-dry void ratio.

The more rubber on the road, the higher the wet-dry void ratio. Most passenger car tires have a rubber-to-void ratio of 60/40, meaning 60% of a contact patch is rubber on the road, and 40% is void. With certain performance tires, that ratio will run 70/30 or 80/20, putting more rubber on the road.

All street tires exhibit a certain amount of void, which are really grooves or rain channels. Water, snow or mud must be evacuated quickly, and it’s up to the tread designer to sort out all the variables before a tire is sent to market.

There is also the matter of noise, which nobody likes. Imagine holding a deck of playing cards in your hand. There are 52 cards. When you shuffle those cards through your fingers, they make a noise. Now, think of the tread blocks in a tire. If they were all arranged in the same way and were the same size, as the cards in a deck, they would roll into and out of the contact patch, striking the ground with the same force, resulting in the same noise.

Thankfully, that’s not how tiremakers create tread designs. The size and pitch of each tread block is varied; the designer makes some tread blocks larger, others smaller and others smaller still. The size of the ribs are also varied as the tread designer works at finding the right phasing of tread-block size and shape along with varying rib configurations.

In this way, the tread designer can interfere with – or tune out – noise signals by creating a countering white noise that’s so quiet we can’t hear it. The intensity of the noise signature changes, too, according to the sizes and shapes of the blocks and how they’re placed around the tire.

Some cars have a lot of toe-in or excessive camber gain. Or, the vehicle owner hasn’t paid attention to tire pressure. In any case, a tire with heel-and-toe cupping develops a wear set and an increasing amount of noise.

When tires with heel-and-toe cupping are rotated, they roll in the other direction, meaning the leading edge of a tread block, which used to be the trailing edge, is suddenly the high spot on the tire. Now we have more noise. That’s another reason to attend to your customer’s tires on a more frequent basis.

It helps to know that tread noise – the hissing and moaning we hear – is called airborne noise. This is noise that registers above 500 Hz (Hertz – abbreviated Hz – measures frequency of vibration as a sound wave passes through a medium. One Hz equals one vibration per second).

In contrast, structure-borne noise refers to everything below 500 Hz, such as the car’s roof, which comes in at about 80 Hz and can sound like thunder if tested on its own. But a steering wheel may only have a natural resonance of 25 Hz, which is just at the threshold of hearing and barely audible.

Some customers will be able to hear noise that others cannot. For some, flying is bothersome because they can pick up the changing pressure in the cabin (about 50 Hz). One passenger will not feel the change, while another will be sensitive to it.

A Sipe’s Role

There are three flavors of tires: summer, winter and all-season. A winter tire is the extreme in terms of void and has a lot of siping. Its tread elements are less rigid yet more aggressive because a winter tire must mechanically link with snow to provide good traction. With more biting edges and sipes, a winter tire is necessarily noisier than its counterparts.

All-season tires are a bit less aggressive vs. a winter tire, yet still have a high level of tractive edges. Because it is designed to be used year-round, all-season tires are designed to deliver the best of both worlds – winter and summer. Some are better in one aspect compared to the other.

In contrast, a summer tire has a more rigid tread design, high levels of wet and dry grip and deep water capability. A summer tire puts more rubber on the road than either the all-season or winter tire. Generally, a summer tire has sipes because it must get rid of water. Sipe-wise, an all-season tread falls in between dedicated summer and winter tires.

With performance tires – particularly all-season performance tires – sipes exist because water must have a place to go. A sipe plays a temporary role as a water-storage tread design feature. It allows the tire to break the water film on the road. A layer of water on the road exhibits surface tension. Some of this water, along with air, will be stored in each sipe, and it is ejected through centrifugal force as the tire rolls through its contact patch.

Sipes result in a Catch 22, however, because the pumping action can create noise. Think of a single straight sipe surrounded by rubber, all alone in the middle of a tread block. There is no way for water or air to escape. But if the sipe is vented to a channel water, perhaps with varying depth or a zig-zag pattern, then the water and trapped air can be evacuated quickly. This gets rid of the hiss and sizzle some drivers hear.

Finally, since every road surface has its own signature, the tire and its tread elements act like the membrane on a drum. The tread design meets every bit of aggregate in the road surface as each tread element rolls through the contact patch. Think of hitting a drum with a drumstick. Noise volume goes up or down depending on the size and hardness of the drumstick or, in the case of a tire, the surface aggregate of the road.

These are basic mechanics and environment at play, and the tread designer must deliver the goods while still providing uniform wear, reasonably long tread life and a hot looking tire.

While the target remains the same, tire designers are constantly changing things up, adding new design elements and new technology to improve the breed. To be successful in the performance business, you need to stay on top of this technology so that you can be the real expert when it comes to explaining how a tire works.

You May Also Like

Continental Tire introduces six new/refreshed tire products during 2024 GOLD dealer meeting

Company leadership also detailed updates to marketing/incentive programs.

Conti-welcome-logo-outside-1400

Continental Tire debuted details on several upcoming new Continental Tire and General Tire products during this year’s GOLD dealer meeting held in Los Cabos, Mexico. Three products were discussed on the Continental side as well as three on the General side.

TrueContact Tour 54 – The TrueContact Tour 54 is an all-season tire with a planned August 2024 release in 60 sizes ranging from 15- to 20 in. The tire will replace its TrueContact Tour predecessor as well as the company’s PureContact LS luxury, all-season touring tire to help remove inventory and SKU complexities.

How manufacturers design LT tires to meet diverse demands

From performance demands to consumer-driven designs for diverse driving environments, the LT tire market is full of innovation.

CT22_TerrainContact-HT_Ford-150_Garage-1400
Tips for recommending the right light truck tire

Talking to customers about LT tires starts with understanding the nuances in the segment.

Klever-AT2-1400
Mickey Thompson Unveils Baja Boss XS Tire

An evolution of the Baja Boss M/T, the Baja Boss XS features an asymmetric tread pattern and reinforced sidewalls.

MTT_BAJA_BOSS_XS
Winter Tire Market Flat, But EV-Specific Products Bring Opportunity

Affected by pandemic supply chain disruptions and the uptick in sales of all-weather tires, the winter tire market in the U.S. has been largely flat in recent years. Despite the expectation that this will continue, tire dealers in snowy regions like the northern U.S. and Canada still should plan ahead to meet consumer demand in

Nokian+Tyres+Hakkapeliitta+R5

Other Posts

Toyo Tires upgrades compound for M171+, M671A+ and M677+ truck tires

The upgrades will be applied to 14 sizes, including 22.5-in. for M171+ and M671A+, and both 22.5-in. and 24.5-in. for M677+.

Toyo-Tires-Compund-Improvement
Radar Tires releases Dimax winter, all-weather tire lines

Both ranges have been tested in multiple winter and summer weather conditions in collaboration with UTAC at its laboratories.

Continental Tire opens new Retread Solutions Center in South Carolina

The company hopes to uncover new improvements and technologies to innovate the retread process.

BKT outlines considerations for choosing material handling tires

According to BKT, a good starting point is to identify the distinguishing features and advantages that differentiate them from one another.

BKT-Material-handling-tires