tomislavp4 wrote:can you clarify why not on the walls? I mean, dimples on the bikes rim are located on the side so why wont it work on the walls (also on the side of the wheel)
The biggest bang for your buck with dimples is if separation is inevitable (as it is behind a sphere and a cylinder) you can trip a laminar boundary layer to go turbulent.
On the walls (relatively flat surface) of a wheel it's not given that separation is inevitable. So maybe in certain conditions dimples might help, but there's also the risk that you'll needlessly trip a boundary layer increasing overall drag if it wasn't likely to separate.
I guess with a bicycle wheel the tread is so narrow that the dimpled rims might be there to try and make the boundary layer stay attached a little longer to the tread after leaving the rim or vice versa (as the flow leaves the tire and covers the rim). With a wide F1 tire you would be able to apply dimples directly to the tread.