Yes, but also no. My understanding is that the 2012 tyres, in having a harder side wall put proportionally more of energy into the suspension, rather than the tyre. The 2013 tyres meanwhile soak up more energy, and put less into the suspension. The result is that while (at a guess) the two need the same amount of energy to heat them up, the 2013 tyres get more of the energy of the car's movement put into them than the 2012 tyres did.theformula wrote:Okay, so just to clear this up, will the kevlar tyres require more energy to be put through them in order to heat them up?
Thus, yes, it needs more energy in terms of the total energy of the car driving over bumps/breaking/accelerating/generally compressing the suspension and tyre to heat them up
But also, no, it doesn't need any more energy in terms of the total energy received by the tyre to heat them up.
That all said, most of this is hearsay and conjecture, so it could all be complete bollocks.