yes i know what you mean, BUT... why would they do one side and not the other? it doesn't make any sense. If they wanted to transfer heat through that layer they'd at least have roughed up the surface a bit on the tyre sideDr. Acula wrote: ↑18 Jun 2019, 16:16You don't want necessarily the maximum amount of heat you technically could achieve, to actually go through the rim. You only have to bring the tyre in the right temperature window and keep it there.
Also you have to consider that over the width of the rim there's quite a big temperature gradient going on. At the very inside and outside of the rim you actually lose some heat because there's relative cool air flowing by.
If i remember correctly the first iteration of the Merc rims with the "improved heat managment" just had a "diamond cut pattern" around in the area where the brake disc were located
http://scarbsf1.com/blog1/wp-content/up ... _rim-s.jpg
Not sure if the picture shows a Merc rim, but that's basically what it looked like.
this is why i said it's disinformation and not really about heat at all, it's about the aero. The cake tin is probably quite hot and so why would they want to make the rim near it soak up more heat? when on the other side, they're actually minimising the transfer. Or vice-versa, if they wanted to flow heat out of the tyre