Tires and Wheels
Tires and Wheels
Tires and Wheels
Chapter 61
Objectives
• Describe how a tire is constructed
• Understand the various size designations of tires
• Tell the design differences between radial and
bias tires
• Be able to select the best replacement tire for a
car
Introduction
• Service technician should be able to:
– Discuss aspects of tire design
– Help customers make safest choice
• Tires and wheels important safety and service
specialty area
Tire Construction
• Several layers of rubber, cords, two
rings of wire
– Casing (carcass) – internal tire
structure
– Ply – metal or fabric rubberized
cord
• Provide strength
• Ends of plies wrap around steel
bead
– Bonded to side of tire
• Beads – coils of wire at side edges
– Chafing strips protect beads
from rim
• Belt – cord structure made of plies
– Under the tread only
• Tread – section of tire that rides on
the road
Tire Cord and
Tire Ply Design
• Rubber must be reinforced with fabric, fiber,
steel cords
• Bias-ply tires have plies that cross at 35-45°
angles
– Ride softer, but wear faster
• Radial-ply tires have casing plies that run across
the tire from bead seat to bead seat
– Longer tread life, better grip, improved fuel
economy
• Larger footprint gives better grip
Tire Tread
• Grooves in tread allow traction on
wet surfaces
– Allow tire to flex without
squirming
– Design is a compromise
• Sipes – small grooves in tread like
knife cuts
– Clear water off the road
• Ribs pump water through grooves
to back of tire
• Different tread patterns for different
driving conditions
• Asymmetrical patterns improve wet
performance
Tire Tread
• Tire tread depth
gauge.
Tire Tread
• Wear indicators are
also called wear bars.
When tread depth is
down to the legal limit
of 2/32", bald strips
appear across the
tread.
Tire Tread Material
• Rubber must be
vulcanized
(heated) to be
stable
• Chemicals
added to natural
rubber to
improve
performance
Tubeless Tires and
Traction
• Tubeless tires
– Inner liner bonded to tire
• Seals air into tire
• Thicker than liner on tube-type tire
– Tubeless tires safer than tube-type
• Does not go flat immediately when punctured
• Traction
– How well tire grips the road
– Affected by:
• Road surface, contaminants
• Tread material, inflation pressure, tread width, etc.
Tire Sidewall Markings
• Tire size listed on sidewall
– Profile is the tire’s height
– Aspect ratio is height-to-width
ratio
• Load index – maximum load at
designated speed rating
– Related to strength of sidewall
plies
• Speed rating indicates better
handling characteristics
• New speed ratings developed for
speeds over 168 mph
Some tires use letters at the end of the
tire size (suffixes) to indicate special
applications including the following.
LT = light truck
ML = mining and logging
MH = mobile home
ST = special trailer
TR = truck
Service Description
P205/75R x 15 92H
205 cross-sectional width in mm
75 aspect ratio
R radial construction
15 rim diameter in inches
92 load index
H speed rating (130 mph/210 km/h)
Load Rating
• How much weight a tire can
safely support at a specified air
pressure
• Amount of load determined by
area of tire and air pressure in it
• Vehicle’s gross weight rating
(GVW or GVWR) includes
weight of vehicle, passengers,
luggage
– Curb weight – weight of
vehicle without people
• DOT symbol indicates the tire
meets DOT safety standards
Load Index
Ply Rating / load range
Letter Maximum Rated Speed