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One thing we hear rather a lot
of from a tyre perspective in motorsport is ‘getting the tyres up to
temperature,’ and temperature, whether it be ambient, track, or tyre, is an
important area of interest for Bridgestone on many levels.
“Temperature in general affects many aspects of motorsport and for
Bridgestone and our tyres it is a very important area,” confirms Director of
Bridgestone Motorsport Tyre Development, Hirohide Hamashima.
Over the course of the season, Bridgestone visits 18 different circuits on
five continents, with the season’s first grand prix taking place in March,
and its last in November. Understandably, the temperatures seen at these
races do vary.
“We see quite a big range of ambient temperatures at the tracks we visit,”
says Hamashima. “And even at one circuit we can see a big range over a race
weekend, and over the course of a day.”
Track temperature influences ambient temperature. Solar radiation heats up
the ground and the tyre. Then the air gets heated by the ground. Direct
solar radiation has a significant effect on tyre temperature, but the main
contributions come from the track and air temperature, through conduction.
“At the circuit during a Grand Prix we constantly monitor the track and
ambient temperature and when cars return from their runs we take temperature
readings from the tyre tread. This is an important part of our data
collection over a race weekend,” explains Hamashima.
“The ambient and track temperatures allow us to see the conditions in which
the tyres are working,” explains Hamashima. “The tread temperature shows how
the tyres are working.”
There are two main reasons why temperature is so important: temperature
working window, and tyre pressure.
“Every tyre has a designed temperature operating range in which it works
best. If a tyre is too cold, it does not grip the road, if a tyre is too
hot, then it also loses grip, and factors like blistering come into play,”
explains Hamashima.
When Formula One moved to being in a sole tyre supply situation, Bridgestone
developed tyres to have a wider temperature operating window to allow a less
extreme performance profile. This allows teams and drivers to be better able
to exploit the tyres’ potential, and the close nature of racing seen last
season, and this year, illustrates the benefit of this to the sport.
Temperature affects pressure as air density changes with temperature, so the
hotter a tyre becomes, the bigger the pressure change.
“Tyre pressure is very important to tyre performance too, and this is an
area that the teams play very close attention to as they try to gain the
maximum benefit from our tyres,” confirms Hamashima. “Our tyre is designed
to supply maximum grip within a certain pressure range. Also if pressure
gets too high the tyre becomes too stiff and the car starts to bounce. So we
want to minimize pressure change during a run.”
Monitoring the temperature of the tyre is also a very good method of
discovering how well the tyre is being used. When a driver returns to the
pits, pyrometers, which are needle probes which penetrate the surface of the
rubber to get a temperature reading, are used to take the tread temperature.
“Of course, over the course of a lap the temperature of the tyre will vary.
Nor is the temperature over the tyre a constant, but we can learn a lot from
our temperature readings from when the cars return to the pits,” explains
Hamashima.
The tread temperatures are taken with three readings across the tyre:
towards the inside edge, the centre and then towards the outside edge. For
the teams, these readings can assist with car set-up.
For example, if temperature is even across the tyre this can illustrate that
camber settings are correct. If the tyre is hotter on the outside edge then
there could be too much positive camber; if it is hotter on the inside edge
then there could be too much negative camber.
“Getting the best performance from our tyres is crucial for the teams to
achieve a race good result so we collect a lot of data in this area, and our
engineers advise the teams,” explains Hamashima.
Formula One is unique in motorsport in the respect that currently tyre
blankets are in use, although this is set to change in the future. Tyre
blankets heat the tyres so that they are at, or near to, their temperature
operating window when drivers leave the pits.
“The removal of tyre blankets in the future will bring Formula One in line
with other types of motorsport,” says Hamashima. “Without tyre blankets
drivers and teams have to be very careful in their tyre management as they
will leave the pits on tyres which are outside their temperature operating
window.”
This change will make getting the tyres up to temperature more important,
and place this more in the hands of the drivers.
“A tyre warms up in its usage through the movement of the rubber molecules
as the tyre is put under various loads, and also heat transference from the
heat generated through the brakes,” explains Hamashima.
“Warm-up for a tyre designed for use without tyre blankets occurs quite
quickly and once up to temperature the tyre performs just like one which was
pre-heated by blankets.” |