I know this might have been asked 100 times but I never found an absolute answer.
Is there an scientific test specifically made to measure tire hardness/softness?
If so How do F1 vs road tires compare to each other?
Is that true about the curing process or are you just making that up? I also think that the direct link to the marbles is a bit of a stretch too....lebesset wrote:...race tyres ,for whatever reason , they not only uses much softer, stickier compounds but also part of the curing process is at the track , hence all the talk of tyres only being good for one lap
clearly this must account for the amount of marbles ...
You'll find that many race tires - and I'd wager the current lot of F1 tires - are very stiff to the touch... at ambient temperature. They only soften up at elevated temperature. Which is part of the reason why hardness comparisons on tires is silly.n smikle wrote:I think the OP means to the touch.
Martin Brundle or Ted Kravitz?? had said that an F1 tyre is very soft to the touch IIRC. While street tires are much harder. Made to last for thousands of kilometers Vs only a few hundred? (I know, different loadings and all but street tyres can ride over rocks etc)
Eh, I wouldn't say that's true. Certainly any tire or rubber that's held at elevated temperature for some amount of time the mechanical properties will change. It's rare that there are universal rules for these things but I can't think of when you'd send race tires to the track which are under-cured.lebesset wrote:but with race tyres ,for whatever reason , they not only uses much softer, stickier compounds but also part of the curing process is at the track , hence all the talk of tyres only being good for one lap
Oh please feel free to elaborate.lebesset wrote:I have simplified a bit