rjsa wrote:None of that negating the basic fact that in a pneumatic, from the greek root pneuma (πνεῦμα) - air, wind, breath, soul - it's air doing the heavy lifting.
Yes, construction can shift some of this load from the patch area X pressure basic behaviour, but we have no clue by how much.
If anyone do have the numbers for current F1 tyres, please share with us.
The amount taken by the sidewall will be anything from 0% to 100% (I know, I know, I'm Mr Obvious
). We can't tell for F1 tyres, but Avon motorsport publish spring rate data for their motorsport tyres. I was playing about with this last night for another tyre thread.
http://www.avonmotorsport.com/resource-centre/downloads
The F3 tyre seemed to have contact pressures from about 30% to 100% of tyre air pressure. This indicated that at different conditions the tyre ranged from having most the load taken by the sidewall to all of the load taken by the air pressure.
The 100% condition seems to come from an overloaded condition, the vertical load is high about 490kg. The 30% was from an obviously underinflated low load condition. I would guess in a real operating condition, the sidewall would be taking some of the load.
I couldn't come up with any firm conclusions, so I didn't post it then. Maybe somoeone else can have more luck crunching the numbers.