Warming up tyres

Author
Discussion

bromers2

Original Poster:

1,867 posts

251 months

Thursday 25th November 2010
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In this cold weather is it politically incorrect to do a bit of weaving, safely of course on the roads.

Bit of heat in the Tyres deffinately helps grip levels.

Whitean3

2,185 posts

199 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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I'm no expert, but won't the tyres just cool down just as quickly, given that they are in contact with cold surfaces?

JLJ

402 posts

231 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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Road car + road tyres + road speeds + F1 style weaving = monumental waste of time. No impact whatsoever on the grip levels while travelling at 60mph on the B347. In addition, you will look like a complete tool whilst risking the attention of the rozzers.

GreigM

6,728 posts

250 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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For weaving to work you need to be going at a pretty serious pace to begin with, otherwise acceleration, braking and simply continuous high speed are far more effective ways of heating the tyres...

Anubis

1,029 posts

180 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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If you see an F1 car warming up for real (not just on TV) you will notice they make a huge amount of noise warming up since they weave and spin the tyres to get the heat into the rubber. Its like doing mini burnouts but without the smoke.

Your road tyres aren't made of the same compound and no amount of weaving will make a difference.

Book yourself some track time in a go kart and you'll notice the difference between road tyres and racing slicks. smile

Edited by Anubis on Friday 26th November 10:22

clorenzen

3,678 posts

236 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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Get some winter tyres. They have a softer compound that provides a much better grip.

jon-

16,511 posts

217 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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Traction control off, light up the rears. Far more effective way to get some extremely temporary heat into the tyres.

Any temperature you do get in them will be surface temperature so expect it to disappear very quickly once you start rolling normally on roads.

neil-f

1,647 posts

208 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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Best thing to do Bromers is leave the Strad in the garage during the salty season, it will just ruin your brake caliper pistons etc.
But if you do take it out the tyres will be difficult to keep any heat in during the winter months (and you know how twitchy the Strad is on cold corsa tyres in the summer....)biggrin

Edited by neil-f on Friday 26th November 13:39

GreigM

6,728 posts

250 months

Friday 26th November 2010
quotequote all
jon- said:
Traction control off, light up the rears. Far more effective way to get some extremely temporary heat into the tyres.
great for drag racing - can cause a tragic imbalance if wanting to go round a corner...

jon-

16,511 posts

217 months

Friday 26th November 2010
quotequote all
GreigM said:
jon- said:
Traction control off, light up the rears. Far more effective way to get some extremely temporary heat into the tyres.
great for drag racing - can cause a tragic imbalance if wanting to go round a corner...
Yes, sorry, my point wasn't so much "follow this advice", more "just drive carefully and according to the conditions because any tyre temperature will be temporary, unless you put serious effort in".

Front tyre temperature is hard work on any MR car.

ali4390

2,322 posts

166 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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My understanding was F1 drivers weave in order to get the tyre smooth by getting rid of mould marks and roughness etc, rather then to get heat into them? Braking hard is a good way to get heat into tyres as the heat from the brakes radiates out (in an F1 car anyway).

JLJ

402 posts

231 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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neil-f said:
leave the Strad in the garage....
The OP owns a Strad and asks this question?!

Anyway, here are some suggestions, please feel free to add some of your own.

1. Take the wheels indoors at night and leave by the radiator. (they'll be lovely and toasty by breakfast time)

2. Wrap them in blankets. (15+ tog, anything less would just be silly)

3. Rub Deep Heat into them. (rub in until dry or cream could compromise grip and you could end up looking foolish)

4. Use hair dryer (then quickly jump in and drive off before heat dissipates)

lambok1d

147 posts

165 months

Friday 26th November 2010
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Get a grip driving