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Tire Speed Ratings

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by ekpolk, Aug 12, 2006.

  1. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    Searched this but didn't really find much.

    In the standard Prius tire size, there isn't much variation in the speed ratings available. From reviewing the TireRack offerings (plenty) it appears that the vast majority of tires available are S, T, or H rated. Obviously, from a safety point of view, these are all perfectly well serviceable. I'm wondering whether the speed rating has any effect upon (or correlation with) the rolling resistance, and thus, ultimately fuel economy. For example, all other things being equal (I know, they never are...), would a V rated tire, be better or worse than an H rated tire? I've looked at one chart of rolling resistance data, and if there's a pattern in it, I haven't quite discerned it yet. On one hand, I'd think that the generally stiffer sidewalls of the higher speed tires would be good for us. OTOH, the higher speed tires also usually have "stickier" compounds, which I'd think would hurt FE. Before I reinvent the wheel (oooo, bad pun....), anyone dug into this question? [​IMG]
     
  2. tnthub

    tnthub Member

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    I would not think the speed rating of the tire would have anything to do with mpg efficiency. The rubber compound, size of footprint, weight of tire, and tread design would have an impact (however minimal each one may be individually). The "speed rating" of a tire is basically a safety rating for street tires so people do not put tires rated for 100mph on a vehicle capable of going 155, like a Z06 Corvette for example. Also, certain ratiungs may cancel each other out. A stickier tire but a more narrow width may provide similiar results to a wider tire with harder rubber compound. Basically the matrix of variables in selecting a tire should be determined by how you utilize the vehicle as when reduced rolling resistance is intorduced into the equation, safety becomes a factor.
     
  3. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    The speed rating and rolling resistance are not directly related. There is an indirect link: a higher rolling resistance tire will generate more heat when rolling down the road, but that doesn't say anything about its ability to dissipate or tolerate that heat.

    Tom
     
  4. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    Thanks guys, I appreciate the quick and thoughtful responses. I realize that the speed rating is not a "stand alone" fact, but rather is itself the result of a number of design parameters of the tire, which themselves may or may not bear upon rolling resistance. Until I got a Prius, two weeks ago, I hadn't given much thought to controllable items that you can use to shave your mpg. In fact, since I owned a G35 and a Sequoia, I tried not to think much about mileage at all... ;) Yep, the "tree" is getting "chopped" soon too...

    Another thought/question on this: As I've been ruminating on tires (my car has only 15k miles, so it's not a rush thing), it seems that two (the two?) major factors in RR would be sidewall stiffness and flex, as well as the "stickiness" of the tread compound. From what I've seen (or not seen), it appears that neither factor consistently "dominates" a given tire's ultimate RR. Are there any other factors I'm missing that bear significantly on RR (whether or not the're easily quantifiable by the consumer)?

    A parting observation: have any of you noticed how incredibly thin the sidewalls are on the Goodyear Integrity? We had on 01 Highlander for a while, and it too came with Integs, which I dumped after about six months for some LTXs. The sidewalls were really floppy and seemed about as thick as a rubber raincoat, if that. Surprised, I checked the stack of MI-LTXs they were installing and the walls were much more substantial. I wonder if there's a RR clue in those really, really thin sidewalls?
     
  5. tnthub

    tnthub Member

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    Maybe someone will correct me, but I do not realistically see how sidewall flex would affect rolling resistance significantly, except in cornering situations. Generally speaking, a taller wheel and sorter sidewall will improve cornering ability but increase harshness. The sidewall (hopefully), never has contact with the road so except for heat from sidewall flex I don't see how it would affect miles per gallon.
     
  6. tumbleweed

    tumbleweed Senior Member

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    Another factor to consider is the weight of the tire. A higher speed rating usually, but not always, means more weight. For example the replacement tires I used on my Prius are available in H or V speed ratings, the V weighs about a pound per tire more. In some tires it's a couple of pounds, in others nothing at all.

    The extra weight should not matter once you are at speed, but getting the extra rotating mass up to speed definitely takes more energy. Of course you will get some of it back when you slow down but not all, and how much depends a lot on your driving style.
     
  7. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    Sidewall "flex" is an issue because each time a given point on the tire rotates down for its next "turn" at being in the contact patch, the car pushes the sidewalls adjacent to that point outward, stretching and "bending" the tire structure as it does (it of course snaps back as that point rotates out of the patch). This, of course, builds heat in the tire, and is why underinflation is so critical, especially in already-tippy SUVs. Too much heat generated (and flexing beyond what the tire structure is meant to endure), and ka-boom. Ask yourself where that tire heating energy is ultimately coming from (your gas tank, of course). Conversely, as Prius owners overinflate (the oft seen 42/40 advice), they are keeping the tires sidewalls from flexing as much as they would at lower pressures, thus reducing resistance (the 42/40 thing also probably reduces the patch size to a very small degree, further lowering friction). With each rotation of the tire, the car must "push" the tire through the flexing of its entire circumference.
     
  8. tnthub

    tnthub Member

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    I understand heat and the concept of stretch and efficiency, but radial tires as a rule achieve higher efficiency results than do no radial tires yet the sidewalls flex more as a result of the radial design. That is why I though that flex would likely not play a significant role in rolling resistance exclusive of extreme driving or extreme conditions. Radial tires will "cup" in underinflated use, even in a straight line, as weight is transferred to the tire but this is not true in a bias ply tire. However in a front drive vehicle, like the Prius, the drive tires are actually offloaded under acceleration.
     
  9. wilco

    wilco New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(tumbleweed @ Aug 13 2006, 08:41 AM) [snapback]302535[/snapback]</div>
    That's correct. The force required to move the extra rotational mass per wheel is the mass times the radius squared.

    I=m*r^2

    Heavier tires have a greater impact on mileage than heavier wheels (pound for pound).
     
  10. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    tnthub:

    Absolutely true that radials are more efficient than bias ply tires, which is why bias ply tires mostly disappeared from passenger car use a couple decades ago. But what counts is not the absolute amount of flexing a tire does, but rather, how much energy it takes to flex the tire. Radials take a lot less than bias ply tires do, and of course, they are of very different internal construction. But the fact remains that as the car rolls forward (or backward too, I suppose...), it is continually "pushing through" the flex resistance of the tire, again, be it a radial or a bias ply type. And for a given tire, by increasing its pressure, you're stiffening the sidewalls, reducing their flexing, and decreasing their rolling resistance. This is why it's so important to keep tires at or above "normal" to achieve good fuel economy. Underinflation increases sidewall flexing, leading to much greater amounts of engergy being wasted, much of which gets converted to heat (so much so that the heat can cause catastrophic failure). Think about it from the other side: as you watch a tire rolling down the road (attached to a car, we hope), where does the energy to constantly flex and unflex the side of the tire come from. Now, comparing the same radial tire, not radials to bias ply tires, which will take more energy to push along, the one that's flexing a lot, or the one that's flexing less?
     
  11. wilco

    wilco New Member

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    ekpolk is right.

    Rolling resistance is a combination of material deformation (tread and sidewall flex - which varies with air pressure and rubber compound), tread design (slick, grooved, knobby, etc.), and contact patch (friction). Often these factors play against each other too.
     
  12. tnthub

    tnthub Member

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  13. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(tnthub @ Aug 13 2006, 04:19 PM) [snapback]302662[/snapback]</div>
    Gee, I wonder why those guys aren't using Goodyear Integritys??? :p ;) Seriously, cool video -- shows nicely what happens under super extreme torque loading.

    Wilco:

    Ooops, I hadn't considered of the weight factor, and how the added structure in a higher speed tire can add more weight. The GY Integs are pretty light at 17 lbs for our size, though you can have IIRC, one of the Kumho models at only 15 lbs. There are a couple same-sizers that are 20# or more. More food for thought. Thanks. [​IMG]
     
  14. wilco

    wilco New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(tnthub @ Aug 13 2006, 02:19 PM) [snapback]302662[/snapback]</div>
    Beautiful! Great vid.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(ekpolk @ Aug 13 2006, 02:38 PM) [snapback]302669[/snapback]</div>
    Yeah, there's always a lot to consider with tires... and lots of factors conflict!
     
  15. Blackfang

    Blackfang New Member

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    ROFL

    Some of you all look way too much into it to save a few mPG on a car that gets over 30. :lol:
     
  16. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Blackfang @ Aug 14 2006, 08:48 PM) [snapback]303287[/snapback]</div>
    Shoot there 'fang, if you're a member of the "stop tryin' at 30 mpg" club, you're definitely in the wrong forum! ;) I didn't ditch a perfectly good (well, almost perfectly good) G35, and replace it with a Prius, just to get "good enough" mileage. And let's face it -- the engineers who designed this car put that big MFD, right smack in the middle of the dash for the same reason that matadors wave red flags in front of bulls -- to provoke a totally predictable, totally unavoidable response. The bull is goaded into a singlemind focus on one thing -- driving a horn as far through that pesky matador as he can. We Prius drivers are likewise goaded to focus on one thing -- getting every last millimeter of travel out of every last drop of gas. I'm already so into it that -- gak -- I might even buy another set of Integritys. :blink: Semper Fi.
     
  17. BobZ

    BobZ New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(ekpolk @ Aug 14 2006, 10:14 PM) [snapback]303299[/snapback]</div>
    Shoot there fang nothing. He's right. You people sound ridiculous to us techs ;) . Speed rated tires are just that speed ratings for fast cars which the Prius IS NOT. The speed rating has to do with how much heat the tire can withstand at a certain speed. A speed rated tire will not increase your mileage. If your getting 30 MPG you need to read other threads on how to drive you Prius
     
  18. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    No Bob, respectfully, you missed my point, on two levels. First, the higher speed rated tires (V for example, at up to 149 mph) are noted for their stiffer sidewalls, designed in part, to combat the accumulation of heat, which in turn, can lead to catastrophic failure. Since stiffening the sidewalls is exactly what a Prius owner accomplishes by slightly overinflating (the 42/40 thing), I raised this question to see if there was any consensus developed, or pattern apparent, of higher speed rated tires helping mileage. I am, as stated before, well aware that other features of higher speed rated tires can and do detract from mileage.

    Second, the post was really meant to be an exercise in humor. I mean, really, you don't think that I try as hard to increase my mileage as the bull does to kill the matador, do you? (edit - the 30 mpg figure btw, came from his post; I get ~48 mpg avg) The point was to poke a little fun at those of us, obviously including myself, who do spend too much time thinking about this. So come on, relax a little and enjoy. I'm sorry if you didn't find it amusing ... I'll try harder next time. ;) :p [​IMG]
     
  19. Blackfang

    Blackfang New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(ekpolk @ Aug 15 2006, 04:36 AM) [snapback]303419[/snapback]</div>
    Stepping up to a higher rating, just makes a tire salesman and me smile;) and it does JACK CRAP for increasing MPG.

    The funny part is I have yet to have customers complain of any premature tire wear. We set them at 37 lbs of air. I see atleast 3-5 a week worrying about their tires wear, have inflated them to get 5 more mpg.
    Seriously I can't stop laughing at how rediculous some of you go into tire ratings and specs trying to get an extra 3-5 mpg.
     
  20. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    C'mon 'fang, relax, back on the meds, please! ;) :p If you look at the beginning of the thread, I was simply asking the question, I was not claiming that higher-than-standard speed rated tires would increase mpg. The question arose in my mind because one of the characteristics of higher speed tires is in fact stiffer sidewalls. But of course, they have other characteristics that can, and I guess do, exact a mileage penalty (e.g. stickier tread compound). I'm new to the Prius community, and certainly don't see many other Prii except mine (except in passing), so what's the problem with asking? I've been averaging 48.5 in city driving for the last two weeks, 11.5 less than EPA, and I'm not disappointed. But one of the prime reasons for getting a Prius is to maximize mileage, so really, you shouldn't be surprised that owners try to, and discuss, any way they can find to shave off another mpg or two. Are we any more silly than the 'vette or 350Z guys who obsess about shaving tenths of a second off their quarter mile times? [​IMG]