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10-31-2022, 07:29 PM | #31 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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IE: The size record-breaking Olympic Trio of ocean liners were originally designed with scaled up hull and deck plating in mind: Two inch thick steel hull plating, for example, in place of time-honored 1 inch steel plating. Ultimately, they were built with 1 inch, but I'm sure their framing was beefed up by some percentage over that of the Cunarders they were built to out-class. Does such scaling up of interior elements of tires occur with tires of greater width, diameter, and overall size? |
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11-01-2022, 08:52 AM | #32 | |||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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While this is something I've wondered about - that is, why doesn't this happen - manufacturing complexity is the reason. There has to be a certain level of standardization within the plant for the plant to remain efficient. Quote:
But also consider that the purpose of the belt is stiffness, not strength. It's sort of like how they size the smoke stacks on a cruise ship so they look in proportion to the size of the ship and not because they need to be bigger. |
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11-02-2022, 12:57 PM | #33 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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So in theory, if I divide my heavier gross axle weight of the two in half, and find out that my tire size and load designation satisfies that capacity at a lower pressure, IE, in my case 30psi instead of 32, can I run my Accord's wider, lower profile tires at that? Your analogy of the tire belts and ocean liner(by the way!) smoke stacks is not exactly correct. Scaling up the radial tire belts is being done for a physical property. Scaling up the funnels on the liner was done for looks. Two different goals. |
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11-03-2022, 08:45 AM | #34 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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The spring rate of a tire varies according to the inflation pressure. Vehicle engineers set the springs, shocks and sway bars at the target inflation pressure, so following the vehicle tire placard is the correct way to do this. |
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11-03-2022, 04:45 PM | #35 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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Thank you - point well taken! Now how do I get all the naysayers and know-it-alls - even those with 'ASE' embroidered on their shirt - on board? |
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11-04-2022, 08:49 AM | #36 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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1) Repeating it whenever I get a chance. I always include the explanation as well as the advice. 2) Recognize that some folks are resistant to new information. I had a friend who called this "First Learnings" - that is the first time some folks hear some bit of information, is the last time they learn. 3) Also recognize that some people (and in this case, I mean you) aren't going to be able to pass on this information successfully. Not because of any personal flaw, but because the recipient isn't going to be receptive of information from certain sources. |
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11-04-2022, 08:41 PM | #37 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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The tire is the 'canvas' and the vehicle is the 'art form' IE: You have a 51" or 44" canvas to paint on, but that doesn't mean you have to use every square inch of that surface for your painting. That 51" is just the maximum dimension of that canvas. They sort of get where I'm going, after that explanation. This question popped into my mind while I was typing that: On vehicles where there is a tire pressure split/offset of the recommended cold pressures: Front=34, Rear=40, for instance. How does a car's TPMS and other body control systems reconcile that difference? I'm sure the axle with the lower pressure will accumulate several dozen more revolutions per mile. |
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11-05-2022, 08:51 AM | #38 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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RPM is a function of inflation pressure AND load. On a tire with a light load, the rpm's will lower. Plus, on ABS based braking systems, the computer notices the DIFFERENCE in revs. I am sure computers can be programmed to ignore steady, but different RPM's. But ABS systems is not my area of expertise, so what I just said is a guess. |
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11-05-2022, 09:41 AM | #39 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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Several 9th generation(2013-17) Accord trims specified, IE, 33 Front 32 Rear cold. That also was accounted for during design of those machines? |
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11-06-2022, 08:38 AM | #40 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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That made for an interesting dynamic in the Ford/Firestone situation. While The tire manufacturer was responsible for the issue, the fact that the vehicle manufacturer approved that tire for their vehicle pot the vehicle manufacturer in an interesting position. Eventually, Ford recalled those tires - and I can't remember how they did it without issuing an official (as in recorded by the Federal government) recall notice. I suppose I could look it up and figure it out, but I know the situation was complex. |
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11-06-2022, 09:20 AM | #41 | ||
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Re: The Donut In The Trunk
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Along this pattern of thought: Some vehicles' TPMS systems use a rudimentary RPM(iles)-based system of monitoring, where if one tire's pressure drops enough to increase it's revs-per-mile/km indication by enough of a difference from the other three, it will trigger a light on the drivers instrument panel. My 2010 Accord might be one such vehicle. So if I do experiment with different front/rear tire pressures, enough of a difference could trigger such a light on my dash - albeit inadvertantly! Best for me to keep them all evenly inflated, if that's what's on the door placard and in the manual. On vehicles where a different front/rear axle pressure is specified, Barry, I would assume the TPMS system(which ever type is used) is factory calibrated to account for the difference in rolling revs-per-mile caused by a two - or more - psi inflation offset between rear and front axles.will More sophisticated RF(radio frequency) TPMS units transmit the actual PSI/kPa/Bar to the BCM(body control) or whatevever receptacle receives this info. If any/all tires are more than below a specified threshold, IE: 75% of door-placard pressure, regardless of differencs in specified front/rear pressures, an indication will occur for those tires - the excessive low pressures on each tire on the dash may be displayed in amber or red, for instance, instead of normal color. Last edited by RidingOnRailz; 11-06-2022 at 12:56 PM. |
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