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Since completely slick tyres are outlawed on most roads due to their inability to handle wet pavement, the "cheater slick" became a popular item in the hot rod world in the 1960s; a typical slick type tyre, but engraved with the absolute minimum amount of tread grooves required to satisfy legal requirements. Since then, however, tyre ...
As braking torque increases, the tire deforms more and tread elements near the rear of the contact patch with the road begin to slip rather than grip. The coefficient of friction rapidly reaches a maximum value at about 10-20 percent slip, and then declines as the longitudinal slip values increase to 100 percent, which represents a fully locked ...
Most mud-terrain tyres are road legal (DOT approved), but maybe prevented from being fitted to modern cars due to laws on minimum tyre speed rating. Most modern cars, SUV and pickup trucks require minimum tyre speed rating of "S" (180kph), but the vast majority of mud-terrain tyres max out at a tyre speed rating of "Q" (160kph).
Design of tire tread has an effect upon noise generated, especially at freeway speeds. [1] Generally there is a tradeoff of tread friction capability; deeper patterns often enhance safety, but simpler designs are less costly to produce and actually may afford some roadway noise mitigation.
For passenger and light truck tyres, the manufacturers or importers have the choice of either putting a sticker on the tyre tread or a label accompanying each delivery of batch of tyres to the dealer and to the end consumer. The tyre label will use a classification from the best (green category "A") to the worst performance (red category "G").
Signed into law by President Bill Clinton on November 1, 2000 The Transportation Recall Enhancement, Accountability and Documentation or TREAD Act ( Pub. L. 106–414 (text) (PDF) ) is a United States federal law enacted in the fall of 2000.
Tire forces are divided into three axes: radial, lateral, and tangential (or fore-aft). The radial axis runs from the tire center toward the tread, and is the vertical axis running from the roadway through the tire center toward the vehicle. This axis supports the vehicle's weight. The lateral axis runs sideways across the tread.
A typical example of a tire marking according to ISO 5775-1 is: 32-597 inflate to 400 kPa. The first number (nominal section width) is essentially the width of the inflated tire (minus any tread). The second number (nominal rim diameter) is the inner diameter of the tire when it is mounted on the rim.