Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.

Wide Vs Skinny Mud Tyres

General Tech Talk

Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators

Posts: 14209
Joined: Sun Jan 11, 2004 11:36 am
Location: Adelaide

Post by -Scott- »

Working VERY roughly, we can look at the numbers of "centre blocks" and "side blocks" in each print.

40psi: 4 centres, 3 sides
30psi: 4.5 centres, maybe 3.5 sides?
20psi: 6 centres, maybe 5 sides.
13psi: 7.5 centres, about 7 sides.

So, from 40 psi to 13 psi, whichever way you look at it, contact patch roughly doubles - where the pressure has reduced by a factor of 3.

It's definitely not a directly linear relationship, which is what I would have expected.

Cheers,

Scott
Posts: 6411
Joined: Tue May 27, 2003 11:49 pm
Location: Brisbane Australia

Post by Beastmavster »

Each block is 2 1/4" wide and 2 1/2" long.


However there is some overlap sideways, and each new block starts about 1 7/8" sidewards from the previous one's left edge.

North south the staggering is about 1/4" per block.


An A4 page is about 11 1/2" long and 8 1/2" wide
Posts: 89
Joined: Fri Jul 15, 2005 9:01 am

Post by Bundy_Harry »

4WD Stuff wrote::idea: Dragsters use wider tyres for the large contact area to the ground. :cool:
A very interesting point this one, one that could change a lot of "opinions" here.

the dragster tyres underwent a massive change in the 70's, the wider larger tyres here were designed to de-form but not in the traditional sense of "wider" for more traction.

have you observed the change when "dragsters" warm their tyres, all noise and smoke yes by the tyres themselves change. They change from shorter, wider tyres to taller, thinner tyres.

Now the gain-sayers amongst us will argue that the warm-up is different from the main drag run, and you may be right. On the main timed run (drag) the taller thinner tyre performs one crucial task. It performs the work of a slingshot, the elasticity in the now longer (re: taller, thinner) tyre assists to propel the car forward faster during acceleration.

Think of the tyre as bagging in the forward direction rather than bagging in the sidewards direction. This single development is what allowed dragsters to move forward with faster times and higher top speeds.

This may or may not be relevant to the argument but I hope this gets more people thinking about the issue of 'fat vs thin'

this is a good argument, i have enjoyed reading it and I hope it continues

bundy_harry
Posts: 19
Joined: Mon Jun 19, 2006 12:38 pm
Location: Brisbane

Post by juan »

How does everyone rate Mickey Thompson MTZ 33" x 12.5"???
I was looking into getting a set
Posts: 211
Joined: Mon Aug 30, 2004 12:44 pm
Location: "the shire"

Post by quick60 »

juan wrote:How does everyone rate Mickey Thompson MTZ 33" x 12.5"???
I was looking into getting a set
Depends if they are a wide or skinny 12.5" ?
Damian.

should I swim it first ?
Posts: 6411
Joined: Tue May 27, 2003 11:49 pm
Location: Brisbane Australia

Post by Beastmavster »

quick60 wrote:
juan wrote:How does everyone rate Mickey Thompson MTZ 33" x 12.5"???
I was looking into getting a set
Depends if they are a wide or skinny 12.5" ?
Lol.


I think there's enough should I buy "brand X" threads already going without hijacking this one.
Posts: 3132
Joined: Wed Sep 28, 2005 3:22 pm
Location: Newy

Post by HotFourOk »

juan wrote:How does everyone rate Mickey Thompson MTZ 33" x 12.5"???
I was looking into getting a set
search! There's lots of threads on this
[quote="RockyF70 - Coming out of the closet"]i'd be rushing out and buying an IFS rocky[/quote]
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 142 guests