Pressure question - is inside pressure the same as road pressure?
Now that I'm a bit drunk, I can say what I thought of saying before but didn't dare be so flippant
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The tire doesn't know what is outside it - air, road, water when aquaplaning etc. So the question boils down to
is inside pressure the same as outside pressure? Now if that were the case, there would be no need for a valve and no need to inflate the tires!
The reason the skin on a ballon can stay in place when there is a greater pressure on the inside than the outside is that there is a third force needed in the balancing of forces and that is an effect from the tension in the ballon's skin. With a rolling tire there will be centrifugal effects too so the front of the contact patch (reducing radius as the wheel turns) won't behave the same as the back of the contact patch (increasing radius), even if they are similar at rest.
You can press on a balloon and increase the pressure at some point on its surface. But the pressure inside a ballon is presumably uniform (as the air inside is free to flow around inside it and balance the pressure). So what happens? You deform the surface of the ballon. If the pressure on the outside and on the inside are equal then the surface is presumably stationary and flat at that point.
Press hard with a finger on a ballon and you can make the surface concave instead of convex. In this case, the rubber is trying to push your finger back out, whereas elsewhere on the ballon the surface is still convex and trying to contract the ballon to a smaller size.
So with uniform pressure in the ballon, you can have a greater external pressure at some points and a lower external pressure elsewhere.
This is what I think is happening with tires.
Rather than try to equate/balance internal and external pressure, I think you have to balance the net effect of [ul]
[li]internal pressure[/li]
[li]external pressure[/li]
[li]centrifugal effects, and[/li]
[li]the elasticity effects of the rubber and bands etc.[/li]
[/ul]