'Running in' new tyres
Discussion
wolf1 said:Yep, although I'm amazed at how fast you can go on lap one on hot brand new tyres.
About two laps.
On the road, I generally pull away from the tyre fitting place and gas it in first gear to get the crap off the middle of the rear tyre at least. It adds a little warmth to it and it's fun too.

stooz said:
BTW, its not mileage, its heat. you need to burn off the excess oils used in the production.
road riding wont get them hot enough, so it takes longer than a few track laps. the mileage is a guide line ; depends how hot you get them.
stupid question time. after having a "moment" on brand new tyres I thought to myself why dont they wipe the tyres over with an alcohol wipe or something to remove the waxes and oils.
or would that not do anything?
stooz said:
BTW, its not mileage, its heat. you need to burn off the excess oils used in the production.
IIRC, tyre moulds are lined with a substance to facilitate a tyre's removal after pressing. A residue of this substance remains on the tyre's surface and it is this that needs to be got rid of. Heat per se will not do it but straightforward friction between tyre and road ("scrubbing") will.
Your statement implies that one can simply heat a tyre (in an oven, for example) in order to rid the tyre of unwanted substances.
>> Edited by itchy on Monday 18th April 14:12
itchy said:
stooz said:
BTW, its not mileage, its heat. you need to burn off the excess oils used in the production.
IIRC, tyre moulds are lined with a substance to facilitate a tyre's removal after pressing. A residue of this substance remains on the tyre's surface and it is this that needs to be got rid of. Heat per se will not do it but straightforward friction between tyre and road ("scrubbing") will.
Your statement implies that one can simply heat a tyre (in an oven, for example) in order to rid the tyre of unwanted substances.
>> Edited by itchy on Monday 18th April 14:12
Correct, its regarding the moulding. the friction though, creates heat..
But an oven will heat the entire tyre, and not necassarily just the outer part, and it won't fit in my oven anyway. the spinning forces, also ensure it gets flicked/scrubbed off rather than just drain to the lowest point
pesty; rubbing it off could be possible, but I think it penetrates the rubber at high temps, so getting the tyre sticky is what allows it to become chemically unbonded again and exit.
If it were just scrubbing, you would also need to 100 miles at full knee down crank to scrub the edges, or you would risk skidding! which means no one would dare scrub the edges of the tyres!
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