PhillipM wrote:As per the other posts, simply as a result of more thermal mass in the carcass/shoulders taking longer to warm up/cool down.
Theoretically I suppose there would be a little more heat generated from the excitations of the additional unsprung mass too.
ubrben wrote:If you keep the rubber the same stiffness and increase the thickness of it, you lower cornering stiffness. This means higher slip angles and more energy being dissipated in the tread
Ben
Moreover, to Phillip's original assumption... adding more tread rubber does NOT mean you have the same heat generation (power rate), and the additional mass means it changes more slowly.
Even driving in a straight line with near-zero slip angles, more tread gauge [if that is indeed what Pirelli is doing] = a higher rate of heat energy generation. Could go so far as to say the heat generation rate and it's sensitivity to speed is increased.
Ultimately how much heat the tire generates through the tread mainly comes down to (a) [to my point] how much tread rubber you have, (b) its loss rate, (c) [to Ben's point] how much strain you're imposing, (d) the cyclical rate [effectively the car speed].
Though yes, the added mass will have an effect on the transient rate of change... but it isn't by itself. You have one aspect which by itself would decrease the transient rate, and one which increases it. Which wins out?
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