I can't help but notice that the dry tyres have more markings on them this GP. Am I late with this?
Look on the green R. How come? Is there something we can't see? like under the top layer of the tyre?
I wouldn't be surprised if that were the case. Doesn't take much to make a slick "directional."n smikle wrote:I can't help but notice that the dry tyres have more markings on them this GP. Am I late with this?
Look on the green R. How come? Is there something we can't see? like under the top layer of the tyre?
Tire won't go down like that because of directionality. Sounds like they did a terrible job of patching and it had no air in it.ISLAMATRON wrote:most radial tires are directional, if you look after the e in stone" you see the manufacterer marking the direction of tire rotation, yes that little arrow.
I remember once when a kid I got a tire patched for my mom, the young guy at the tire place put the tire on running in the wrong direction, after the tire already having about 20K miles on it, that damn tire blew on me just as I got onto the highway and got up to 60mph. Full delamination, tore up the front fender. Now I watch the tire techs like a hawk whenever I get some new rubber or any tire work done.
It had air in it, I checked it myself before and it still held air after it delaminated on the highway. I am pretty sure it was because of the directionality, and I have seen it on other peoples car since then.Jersey Tom wrote:Tire won't go down like that because of directionality. Sounds like they did a terrible job of patching and it had no air in it.ISLAMATRON wrote:most radial tires are directional, if you look after the e in stone" you see the manufacterer marking the direction of tire rotation, yes that little arrow.
I remember once when a kid I got a tire patched for my mom, the young guy at the tire place put the tire on running in the wrong direction, after the tire already having about 20K miles on it, that damn tire blew on me just as I got onto the highway and got up to 60mph. Full delamination, tore up the front fender. Now I watch the tire techs like a hawk whenever I get some new rubber or any tire work done.
it has to do with the construction and the direction the plies of the tire are oriented and how they are overlapped.ringo wrote:The thing is these are slicks, not the treaded one we have at home. So its funny that they are directional. My guess is on a microscopic level the tire is suppose to wear of in a certain direction?
Actually its quite common...Most cheaper tires tend to be directional in that you mount one face out regardless left or right, but once you go to higher end, if not the construction of the tire it would at least be the groove cut that you have to mount them in the direction of rotation. So when you swap tires for rotation you actually would have to dismount them from the wheels....tok-tokkie wrote:I would be extremely surprised if any car tyres on general sale were directional like that because then you could not swap wheels from the left to right side of the car (& vice versa).
Yes. I realised how wrong my post was later last night.RacingManiac wrote:Actually its quite common...Most cheaper tires tend to be directional in that you mount one face out regardless left or right, but once you go to higher end, if not the construction of the tire it would at least be the groove cut that you have to mount them in the direction of rotation. So when you swap tires for rotation you actually would have to dismount them from the wheels....tok-tokkie wrote:I would be extremely surprised if any car tyres on general sale were directional like that because then you could not swap wheels from the left to right side of the car (& vice versa).
Not only are they directional, but the road tires on my BMW 135 are different sizes front/back. So, I cannot use any tire in any position other than the original position.tok-tokkie wrote:Yes. I realised how wrong my post was later last night.RacingManiac wrote:Actually its quite common...Most cheaper tires tend to be directional in that you mount one face out regardless left or right, but once you go to higher end, if not the construction of the tire it would at least be the groove cut that you have to mount them in the direction of rotation. So when you swap tires for rotation you actually would have to dismount them from the wheels....tok-tokkie wrote:I would be extremely surprised if any car tyres on general sale were directional like that because then you could not swap wheels from the left to right side of the car (& vice versa).