richbee wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 3:22 pm
Ken wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 10:43 am
Mart wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 9:48 am
Silly thought, but with a BEV, being charged from green leccy, then perhaps reverting to more tyres, at lower pressures might be seen as a good idea. Fuel consumption would go up but clean(er), but road damage would reduce, and grip and braking would be enhanced ..... but we'll need bigger batts, better charging etc etc..
Not a silly thought at all. BEVs have shown increased range with softer higher profile tyres over low profile harder ones.
PS that article was the correct one.
I thought in general softer tyres are worse for consumption (and tyre wear).
I found from personal experience, low profile tyres tend to have softer rubber in order to give reasonable comfort (and better cornering I guess) - hence worse consumption and faster wear, but higher profile can get away with harder rubber for the same comfort.
I drive a Transit custom with standard 16" high profile tyres - lots of people fit 18" or 20" rims cos they look cool and then complain bitterly that they only get 8-15k miles out of the tyres, while mine are currently on nearly 60k!
(just realised you might be talking about softer in terms of tyre pressure, rather than softer rubber, but I'm not deleting everything at this stage
)
Hiya richbee, my fault for any confusion, and I think Ken was following my lead. My understanding of road wear/tyre damage is mainly down to pressure. The higher the pressure, the harder the tyre, the more damage to the road. But yes, probably more tyre wear for lower pressure tyres.
I was just pondering if damage could be reduced, or even max weight increased, if the amount of tyres, and/or tyre width was increased, and pressure reduced. I said it was maybe silly, as it would mean more fuel consumption, from greater rolling resistance, but perhaps (big stretch here, so feel free to knock this idea hard) if they are BEV trucks, and the leccy is green, then it's not so bad?