Flanders
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
TLDR. For the purposes of acceleration and braking, the effective weight of a spinning wheel is up to twice the actual weight.
The kinetic energy of a spinning wheel on a moving vehicle is up to twice that of the same mass at the same speed without the rotation (e.g., the spare). The ratio is less than 2 - it would be exactly 2 if all of the rotating mass were on the tread - and is the same at all vehicle speeds. This energy must be supplied by the engine to accelerate the vehicle and dissipated by the brakes to slow it.
For example, replacing factory tires with 35s at +25 lbs apiece effectively adds up to 225 lbs, that is, up to 50 lbs on each corner and 25 for the spare. One NFL running back, perhaps an undersized one.
The factor of <2 only applies to acceleration and deceleration. At constant speed only the actual mass that matters.
And this says nothing about the forces on the suspension and steering due to bigger heavier tires.
The kinetic energy of a spinning wheel on a moving vehicle is up to twice that of the same mass at the same speed without the rotation (e.g., the spare). The ratio is less than 2 - it would be exactly 2 if all of the rotating mass were on the tread - and is the same at all vehicle speeds. This energy must be supplied by the engine to accelerate the vehicle and dissipated by the brakes to slow it.
For example, replacing factory tires with 35s at +25 lbs apiece effectively adds up to 225 lbs, that is, up to 50 lbs on each corner and 25 for the spare. One NFL running back, perhaps an undersized one.
The factor of <2 only applies to acceleration and deceleration. At constant speed only the actual mass that matters.
And this says nothing about the forces on the suspension and steering due to bigger heavier tires.
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