jadcock
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 2, 2005
- 22
We're having a discussion related to this topic on another automotive-related bulletin board.
I understand that tires are speed-rated according to their relative capability to withstand certain sustained speeds. I suppose heat and pressure build not only as the speed increases, but also as the time duration (at that speed) increases...up to a point. Yes/no?
An S-rated tire is nominally capable of a sustained speed of 112 mph. I'm sure that if you went 115 mph, it's not going to blow up. Or even 120 mph. But wait -- the next speed rating (T) is at the 118 mph level, so there must be a rather defined line between those two speeds of what a given tire can handle.
That's what our discussion is about...what is the manufacturers', or the industry's, definition of a "sustained speed"? We're all pretty sure that one could drive an S-rated tire quickly up to 120 mph, then back down below 112 mph without any problem. Or an H-rated tire, momentarily, up to 140 mph without any problem.
But for how long? 10 seconds? 10 minutes? Long enough, and you start getting into the territory of the next speed rating. For instance, if you can drive an S-rated tire at 120 mph for 10 minutes, wouldn't it have a T-rating? Etc.
I figure there must be some sort of "regulated" assessment method for determining the official speed ratings of a tire. What is that method? Does it measure heat/pressure? Does it measure physical expansion of the tire (centrifugal forces)? And what is the time duration? Must it perform at a given level for 30 minutes to achieve that rating? Or only 5?
I'm sure there's somebody here in the know who can answer this!
Thanks in advance,
Jason
I understand that tires are speed-rated according to their relative capability to withstand certain sustained speeds. I suppose heat and pressure build not only as the speed increases, but also as the time duration (at that speed) increases...up to a point. Yes/no?
An S-rated tire is nominally capable of a sustained speed of 112 mph. I'm sure that if you went 115 mph, it's not going to blow up. Or even 120 mph. But wait -- the next speed rating (T) is at the 118 mph level, so there must be a rather defined line between those two speeds of what a given tire can handle.
That's what our discussion is about...what is the manufacturers', or the industry's, definition of a "sustained speed"? We're all pretty sure that one could drive an S-rated tire quickly up to 120 mph, then back down below 112 mph without any problem. Or an H-rated tire, momentarily, up to 140 mph without any problem.
But for how long? 10 seconds? 10 minutes? Long enough, and you start getting into the territory of the next speed rating. For instance, if you can drive an S-rated tire at 120 mph for 10 minutes, wouldn't it have a T-rating? Etc.
I figure there must be some sort of "regulated" assessment method for determining the official speed ratings of a tire. What is that method? Does it measure heat/pressure? Does it measure physical expansion of the tire (centrifugal forces)? And what is the time duration? Must it perform at a given level for 30 minutes to achieve that rating? Or only 5?
I'm sure there's somebody here in the know who can answer this!
Thanks in advance,
Jason