Probably not much if anything of significance. Heat is so dominantly affected by load (deflection really) and speed. Speed left to right is effectively identical. That leaves deflection. If tires on one side of the car are worked on average appreciably more than the other.. they'll run hotter. If temperature was really the end-all-be-all you could maybe bleed air out of the one side to see if you can run them hotter. Maybe you can get some small effect from some suspension bits - but then you're getting secondary effects rather than primary. Temperature is the not the end game anyway. It's not so dominant that you can throw away everything else in your setup - or teams would and not have this issue.MrCodyWeston wrote:In this month's Racecar Engineering magazine, in an article about the new Pirelli tires, Ross Brawn says that at some circuits (Catalunya, specifically) one side of the car's tires are warm and the other side's tires are cold. I was wondering how, or if, a car's set-up can counteract this phenomenon. I mean, what can an engineer do to get ALL of the tires in the same temperature range. Thanks guys!
That would be the corollary of less pressure = more deflection = more heat, yes.Nando wrote:Would it be possible to run different pressures in either side?
More pressure = less deflection of tire = less heat?
Cool man. NASCAR I take it?Jersey Tom wrote:I'm an engineer in pro level American racing, yes.
Not necessarily, I think. The "positive feedback" you mentioned is likely to be stabilised somewhat by the fact that the effective tyre damping coefficient reduces as the temperature rises (all within limits, of course).olefud wrote:In general, the hotter tire will have better adhesion, do more work and get hotter yet than the cooler tire. With this positive feedback system, you can push it in here but it pops out there.
I'd argue that the effects of wedge (which is as applicable to road course cars as oval, really) can be explained purely by "traditional" methods without even touching on temperature.olefud wrote:Wedge is probably the most common example of getting a cooler tire to work more, but only on one diagonal.
We may not differ on this. My point was that adjustments such as wedge and roll stiffness can rearrange the weight distribution/transfer while not increasing the total weight available. Thus, within limits, the work done, and associated temperature, can be affected at the tires, but only diagonally or at an end rather than side to side.Jersey Tom wrote:I'd argue that the effects of wedge (which is as applicable to road course cars as oval, really) can be explained purely by "traditional" methods without even touching on temperature.olefud wrote:Wedge is probably the most common example of getting a cooler tire to work more, but only on one diagonal.
I'm reasonable sure, that teams in F1 will use sensors (IR) to measure tyre surface temperature in real time, as well as tyre pressure.Cam wrote:Is there sensors or some other device readily available that can track the tyre temp real time and display that? Does F1 currently do this? Or is there some kind of reg preventing this level of information gathering? I would have thought a basic thermal sensor strategically placed facing each tyre would give some kind of relevant data.
It seems simple enough, that it you knew the tyres were getting in the right zone, or weren't for the matter, possibly adjusting the driving style may help this? Or am I way off here.