https://michelinmedia.com/michelin-uptis/
Seems to be the most "tunable" tyre for movement, could easily be a slick, and we would never see a race ending puncture again.
Is it coming to racing within the next 10 years?
Yeah, just came across it as well.
21. What will happen if some small stones or mud or snow get in between the structure of Uptis?
The objective during the development of the commercial product is to test Uptis in all of these situations. Some preliminary tests show that stones, mud or ice/snow will not stay inside the Uptis
I'm sure that was a HUGE part of the R&D.Edax wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 17:03Yeah, just came across it as well.
21. What will happen if some small stones or mud or snow get in between the structure of Uptis?
The objective during the development of the commercial product is to test Uptis in all of these situations. Some preliminary tests show that stones, mud or ice/snow will not stay inside the Uptis
These airless tyres have been "coming" for at least 10 years already. It might make sense for motorsport to take it on as a development aid.
Since they are 3d printed, we could actually see teams designing their own tyres for their individual requirements, and having them printed by a manufacturer... It could be something huge, and the current tech for producing items is lightyears ahead of where it was 10 years ago.
One would be forgiven to believe that with Michelin's racing heritage, they they have studied this as well. It will be interesting to see what PR comes out of this. Maybe some Pikes Peak/Nordschleife/LeMans demonstrations incoming? Maybe a WRC test? I'm looking forward to this!RZS10 wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 17:41The second video in the gallery (near the bottom of the page) shows an extreme example where they packed it with mud and let it dry and it's pretty much clear of most (maybe even all) of it after some time.
The question with regards to racing use would probably be how well those would cope with high speeds (i don't think it's mentioned anywhere?) or high lateral loads ... the "soon™" is probably very fitting.
Additive manufacturing may just eliminate a huge amount of waste material. It definitely looks like these have way more surface area than regular tyres, so it must come from somewhere else.
I doubt it'll reduce scrap as it's the tread block wearing which is why tyres need replacing.