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See-through Tires!


doctorbrody

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These tires are made in South Carolina.

Radical new tire design by Michelin - they had a pair at the Philadelphia car show.

 

http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r129/doctorbrody/ATT00002.jpg

http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r129/doctorbrody/ATT00003.jpg

http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r129/doctorbrody/ATT00001.jpg

http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r129/doctorbrody/ATT00000.jpg

 

Pretty cool, right?

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Not a tire.. Called a "tweel" if I remember correctly. Yes, very cool though.

 

^ I think there's no sidewall just to show what's going on inside. I assume a production model would have a sidewall and would look 99% the same as a reg. tire.

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these have been around since the car in the pic was new.

 

never released.. I think its a great idea.. put sidewalls on it like a normal tire and make it so they dont require air.

 

Then the politicians who think we can save gas by inflating tires will have nothing to say. :lol:

and construction workers will be VERY happy when they run over an entire box cutter and it gets into the tire.. and they can keep driving.

"The penalty good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." - Plato
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I think them not being released yet (if they are still even planning on it) is a good thing so long term reliability is established. And never needing to worry about blowing a tire is a great thing. But there could be issues with some of the supports breaking or tearing...

 

Lots to think about.

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it would seam like a con to this design would be the transfer of force from the tire to the rim. in other words when you would hit a pot hole or something the force of the shock would transfer directly to the rim via the (for lack of a better term) semi rigid spokes where as air does act like a cusion.
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The tweels do have some design improvements to go through, noise being one since the exposed spokes are open and cause air turbulence. They are being used in some construction & Bobcat type skidsteer markets (no flat tires is good for reducing downtime).

 

They are a pretty cool concept and very tunable by material / design for specific suspension response. They do offer some significant handling improvement potential over conventional tires, but it'll probably be years before any market products are available.

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Didn't we see these over a year ago :spin:

 

I remember the technology for this coming out a while ago. The concept was to have a tire... "tire", that could never go flat (obviously... since it has no air). Made from a very strong and superelastic rubbery compound, it is supposed to be very bendable and absorb everything the road can throw at it.

 

I have no idea how handling would be though... I'd have to say I can't imagine it being all that good... or performance in snow or slush.

 

But protection from the possibility of flats is a nice concept.

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Performance handling can be significantly better with tweels vs normal wheels.

 

Military & utilitarian uses are also much better. I've seen video of actual tests where small explosions were used to examine the durability. The tweels took the hit and stayed intact, meaning that the vehicle could have improved durability since it could be hit and still drive away to safety.

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