Hi,
Does higher tyre pressure gives you more grip? or does lower tyre pressure gives you more grip?
because i was reading some articles on the internet. and some say higher pressure = more grip, but some say lower pressure.
Thanks
The other responses have been far more technical (and accurate), but there has always been a sort of "street smart" that raising the tire pressure just a few pounds over spec will give you slightly better handling. Back in the dark ages of 1960s-70s when some of us were still running bias ply tires we'd always pump the tires 2-4 pounds over spec before a rally or autocross (gymkhana). From my seat of the pants chassis dyno (call it a one-post test rig )this is probably true, but has NO bearing on race car tire settings. In the competition arena very small increments of tire pressure can make a noticeable difference (at least that's what the drivers and engineers say).freedom_honda wrote:Hi,
Does higher tyre pressure gives you more grip? or does lower tyre pressure gives you more grip?
because i was reading some articles on the internet. and some say higher pressure = more grip, but some say lower pressure.
Thanks
I disagree to a point. If I sent a driver out on a set of tyres with the following cold pressures - L.F. 15 psi, R.F. 16 psi, R.R. 15 psi, L.R. 14 psi on a clockwise circuit with the aim of achieving 20 psi across the rear and 21 psi across the front. I'd have to ensure that the pressures came up to or were dropped to the desired pressures before I could start to get reliable / useful temperature data.Ciro Pabón wrote:Well, I'm here with donskar. I know little about pressure, actually I don't measure pressure, but I know a bit about tuning. And from what I know, my recommendation is NEVER MEASURE TYRE PRESSURE (sorry for yelling): it won't lead you anywhere. What you want to measure is the temperature.
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Depends on the tires or series for an oval race usually 10 laps in if you expect cautions ect. You might not be able to cool off the tires between corners.Jersey Tom wrote:Key to FF's bit, is you should aim for that even temp spread mid-corner.
Quite odd for a kart racer / kart tunner. I don´t know if it is because the type of tires karts use arround here, but it is a standard among kart races to keep an eye closely to hot tire pressure not to pass 14 psi. Usually 12psi to start on cold tires. They told me if you run a higher pressure the tires turn to soap in a matter of minutes.Ciro Pabón wrote:Well, I'm here with donskar. I know little about pressure, actually I don't measure pressure, but I know a bit about tuning. And from what I know, my recommendation is NEVER MEASURE TYRE PRESSURE (sorry for yelling): it won't lead you anywhere. What you want to measure is the temperature.