Serious Eric
Enthusiast
Can some of you tire experts out there tell me exactly why we need our huge 335s as opposed to say 300s or even 275s? Is it for show or go?
Here's the basis of my question -> I'm pretty sure that for any given tire pressure, different width tires will all produce *nearly* the same area of contact patch. Is this not true? My reasoning is thus. The corner weight is transfered to the ground as pressure (force per unit area) over a given area of contact patch. The pressure over this contact patch should be equal to the internal tire pressure (minus some second-order effects of sidewall and tread stiffness). So for two equally loaded wheels, mounted with different sized tires filled to the same pressure, the pressure exerted at the ground will be the same, thus the contact patch must be the same area (although not necessarilly same shape).
I can think of really only one reason why the larger width tire would be superior and that has to do with tire deformation and longevity more than anything else. It seems to me that for a smaller width tire to achieve the same contact patch as a larger tire, it must deform more longitudinally (in the direction of roll) since the contact patch width is constrained by the tire width. I imagine that this degree of deformation is something you want to minimize to reduce heat and tire wear.
Other than this, what real good are these monsters doing for us?
Here's the basis of my question -> I'm pretty sure that for any given tire pressure, different width tires will all produce *nearly* the same area of contact patch. Is this not true? My reasoning is thus. The corner weight is transfered to the ground as pressure (force per unit area) over a given area of contact patch. The pressure over this contact patch should be equal to the internal tire pressure (minus some second-order effects of sidewall and tread stiffness). So for two equally loaded wheels, mounted with different sized tires filled to the same pressure, the pressure exerted at the ground will be the same, thus the contact patch must be the same area (although not necessarilly same shape).
I can think of really only one reason why the larger width tire would be superior and that has to do with tire deformation and longevity more than anything else. It seems to me that for a smaller width tire to achieve the same contact patch as a larger tire, it must deform more longitudinally (in the direction of roll) since the contact patch width is constrained by the tire width. I imagine that this degree of deformation is something you want to minimize to reduce heat and tire wear.
Other than this, what real good are these monsters doing for us?