HF2300
Insanity Prawn Boy
[QUOTE 4678184, member: 9609"]generally 8 ton per axle on fully freighted lorries but an unloaded flat bed triaxle would not be much more than a ton an axle.[/QUOTE]
Typical car probably 0.8 to 1.2 tonnes so 0.2 - 0.3 tonnes per wheel. Range Rover 2 - 2.5 tonnes so around 0.5 - 0.6 tonnes per wheel. Tri-axle flat trailer probably 6 - 8 tonnes unladen so 1 - 1.4 tonnes per wheel.
Ground pressure is related to contact patch size and inflation pressure as well, though. Not sure what the contact patch sizes are but I'd guess a modern Range Rover has a contact patch larger than a single or twin truck wheel (and a different shape) but not as large as a supersingle.
The car tyre regulations haven't always been that way. Having said all this, my recollection is that the car tread depth went up from 1 to 1.6 mm due to harmonisation with EU regulations specific to car tyres. Where you have to have the minimum, and what the rest of the tread can be like, has changed over the years as well.
There was a bit of a spat about this last year as several tyre manufacturers wanted EU laws to change to a 3 mm or even 4 mm tread depth. They claimed this was for safety though I can't help feeling their motivation might have been the increase in sales.
Michelin held out, saying that they saw no link between tread depth and braking performance and that modern premium tyres were designed to ensure maximum effectiveness down to 1.6 mm. They also said they saw no relationship between tread depth and increased accident rate. Interestingly though they also said that in recent years tyres have entered the market that are specifically designed to do well in tests rather than real world conditions, and that these can lose up to 30% of their effectiveness as they wear.
This from a Tyresafe survey on illegal tyres last year:
Illegal tyres by city
Bristol 46.20%
Birmingham 42.00%
Manchester 35.40%
Cardiff 31.80%
Cambridge 29.50%
Liverpool 26.00%
Leeds 24.40%
Newcastle-upon- Tyne 21.40%
Edinburgh 20.60%
Greater London 13.80%
Region Share of illegal tyres
Northern Ireland 36.50%
North West England 31.20%
South West England 29.80%
Wales 29.10%
Scotland 27.40%
South East England 27.30%
Midlands 26.90%
England (total) 26.80%
North East England 25.80%
East England 14.40%
Greater London 13.80%
Typical car probably 0.8 to 1.2 tonnes so 0.2 - 0.3 tonnes per wheel. Range Rover 2 - 2.5 tonnes so around 0.5 - 0.6 tonnes per wheel. Tri-axle flat trailer probably 6 - 8 tonnes unladen so 1 - 1.4 tonnes per wheel.
Ground pressure is related to contact patch size and inflation pressure as well, though. Not sure what the contact patch sizes are but I'd guess a modern Range Rover has a contact patch larger than a single or twin truck wheel (and a different shape) but not as large as a supersingle.
The car tyre regulations haven't always been that way. Having said all this, my recollection is that the car tread depth went up from 1 to 1.6 mm due to harmonisation with EU regulations specific to car tyres. Where you have to have the minimum, and what the rest of the tread can be like, has changed over the years as well.
There was a bit of a spat about this last year as several tyre manufacturers wanted EU laws to change to a 3 mm or even 4 mm tread depth. They claimed this was for safety though I can't help feeling their motivation might have been the increase in sales.
Michelin held out, saying that they saw no link between tread depth and braking performance and that modern premium tyres were designed to ensure maximum effectiveness down to 1.6 mm. They also said they saw no relationship between tread depth and increased accident rate. Interestingly though they also said that in recent years tyres have entered the market that are specifically designed to do well in tests rather than real world conditions, and that these can lose up to 30% of their effectiveness as they wear.
This from a Tyresafe survey on illegal tyres last year:
Illegal tyres by city
Bristol 46.20%
Birmingham 42.00%
Manchester 35.40%
Cardiff 31.80%
Cambridge 29.50%
Liverpool 26.00%
Leeds 24.40%
Newcastle-upon- Tyne 21.40%
Edinburgh 20.60%
Greater London 13.80%
Region Share of illegal tyres
Northern Ireland 36.50%
North West England 31.20%
South West England 29.80%
Wales 29.10%
Scotland 27.40%
South East England 27.30%
Midlands 26.90%
England (total) 26.80%
North East England 25.80%
East England 14.40%
Greater London 13.80%