How to manage tire temperatures for improved on-track performance

J.G.
By J.G. Pasterjak
Sep 30, 2024 | tires, tech | Posted in Features | From the April 2020 issue | Never miss an article

As everyone’s favorite fictional blonde trespasser can attest, ideal temperature is a key to satisfaction. And while having tires that are too hot or too cold won’t necessarily lead to a bear mauling, ensuring that your rubber is in the “just right” range is crucial to both performance and longevity.

But first, why does tire temperature matter? Once we answer that question, we can get to the practical part of the discussion: how to maximize tire performance with temperature.

Tires: Hot or Cold?

First, let’s dispense with the notion that tires work better when they’re “hot” or “cold.” The real answer is that every tire has an optimal temperature, one where it’s at its grippiest on a given surface.

Speaking in very general terms, the reason tires get grippier when hot is because heat excites the molecules of the polymer that makes up their “rubber.” This excitement softens the rubber, making it more pliable and thus better able to squirm into the tiny imperfections in the track surface, creating more mechanical interface between the rubber and the road. More interface means more friction, which means more grip.

Basically, that’s why concrete surfaces tend to offer better grip than asphalt. Concrete has more texture, meaning more nooks and crannies for the rubber to squirm into.

But you may have to run on older concrete, where the surface has become so textured that the tiny peaks and valleys can no longer offer resistance against the tires moving over them. These peaks subsequently break off, producing dust or gravel. That’s actually somewhat analogous to what happens when a tire gets too hot: The polymer chain breaks, and instead of remaining pliable, the tire starts to shed tiny (or not so tiny) pieces of overheated rubber.

More generalizations: Most dedicated race rubber or R-compound DOT tires are designed for maximum performance when their carcass is warmer than ambient temperature. Why not design them to produce some amazing grip right off the pit lane? Because the inevitable stress and friction during use would quickly overheat the tires to the point that they’d aggressively break down. Take-home message: Race tires tend to be designed to produce their optimal grip at typical track temperatures.

So-called street tires, on the other hand, tend to produce their best grip at much lower temperatures, and quickly fall off when overheated. This is especially true of the current crop of 200-treadwear tires that are popular in track and autocross classes requiring street tires. But the ideal ranges for even those tires can be highly variable. It’s not unusual to walk through a national-level autocross grid and see some competitors cooling their tires with water while others are using blankets to keep their tires warm. Each tire–and even each chassis setup–can have its own sweet spot.

The takeaway here is to be aware of the characteristics of your tires at different temperatures. Know what’s too hot, what’s too cold, what’s just right, and measure in a consistent way. Skidpad testing and a pyrometer will help determine ideal operating temperatures.

Under Pressure

The other big variable with tire temperature is air pressure. A tire is essentially a spring, and more or less air pressure changes the rate of that spring, the shape of the contact patch, and the tire’s interaction with the road surface. Plus, heating the tire heats the air inside it, and hotter air increases in pressure.

How much? Well, David Podolsky from Chicken Hawk Racing showed us a handy chart that he built using data from a test of his active tire warmers: Pressure increased slowly at first as the tire warmed beyond ambient temperatures, but the curve quickly ramped up to reveal a fairly linear relationship between temperature rise and pressure rise. His testing showed a 6 psi gain in pressure with a 75-degree bump in tread temperature alone.


Chart Courtesy Chick Hawk Racing

Even at lower duty cycles, a modest increase in temperature–from around 100 to 140 degrees, which would be fairly typical for a hot day of autocrossing–showed a 3 psi gain. That’s about a 10% difference in tire pressure as temps increase, so this variable is highly worth monitoring.

Getting Them Hot

So, we’ve established that in most cases, some heat beyond ambient temperatures is good for tires. How, then, do we build that heat?

In most cases, with friction: the friction of the tire tread on the road surface and the friction of the brake pads against the rotors. All this friction contributes to heat within the wheel-and-tire assembly.

The common trick of slaloming the car back and forth during a pace lap or an out lap can contribute some tire temperature. Overall, though, it’s not the best way to build tire heat, as there’s no sustained cornering to produce prolonged friction periods. This technique does, however, prevent the tires from collecting gravel, keep the driver alert, and look super cool.

A better strategy for producing tire heat during pace laps involves prolonged brake applications, or short periods of hard braking. The longitudinal tread that friction imparts puts more heat into the tread surface than lateral friction, and additional radiant heat is produced by the braking system. Just make sure to check your mirrors first.

There’s also the option of preheating your tires, and that’s where Chicken Hawk Racing and its tire heaters come in. Having up-to-temperature rubber on the out lap can be a huge benefit, especially when ambient conditions don’t lend themselves to fast tire heating.


Photography Credit: JG Pasterjak

The Chicken Hawk tire warmers start at around $1650 for a set of four and can get a set of tires up to operating temperature in less than 30 minutes. In our testing, we saw durometer reductions of 15 to 20% between ambient and operating temperature, and the ability to precisely monitor tire pressures as the tires heat in your pits is a huge advantage.

The downside to tire warmers is that many competition venues specifically disallow them during racing. Even so, as a testing and development tool, they can increase the efficiency and accuracy of your testing exponentially. They can also preserve tire life by reducing the number of heat cycles your tires endure.

While we’re at it, let’s talk a bit about heat cycling and what it actually does. We mentioned earlier that tires are made of an elastic polymer. Proper heat cycling involves not just heating–which weakens those bonds and makes them less resilient–but bending and stretching of the tread, which helps more consistently align the granular structure of the elastic tread.

When the tire is heated, the weakest molecular bonds are broken and then realigned by the dynamic forces of the tread on the pavement. As the tire cools to ambient temperature, those bonds relink in a stronger, more consistently aligned fashion. Tire warmers, on the other hand, preheat the tire to operating temperature before it’s sent out on track for a massage; then they can be used to slowly cool the tire over 24 or even 48 hours.

Yes, you can precondition tires a bit by simply heating them and cooling them without the additional dynamic exercise. That’s better than nothing, and strengthens some of the weaker molecular bonds, but it’s not as thorough a process as dynamic heat cycling.

Keeping Track

All this talk of tire temperatures and no discussion of how to take those measurements? Okay, here it is: Get a pyrometer. As for probe versus infrared, an infrared pyrometer that reads surface temps only will not be as consistent as a contact pyrometer that pierces the surface of the tire slightly. The tread surface will shed heat quicker and more variably than the portion of the tire just under the skin, so readings with a non-contact pyrometer can be less accurate and more variable.


Photography Credit: JG Pasterjak

That said, a $30 infrared heat gun–while not as good as a proper insertion pyrometer–is worlds better than not taking tire temps. So don’t talk yourself out of it just because you can’t get the ultimate tool. Whatever you use, just use it consistently so your data can be easily compared from session to session.

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Comments
stylngle2003
stylngle2003 GRM+ Memberand Reader
11/10/21 6:59 a.m.

In case anyone wants to get in on the Pyro game, I have a few good used Longacres I would let go for not much money.  

ShinnyGroove (Forum Supporter)
ShinnyGroove (Forum Supporter) HalfDork
11/10/21 2:44 p.m.

If you want a reasonably priced pyrometer, get one of these probes and plug it into any digital multimeter that accepts K-type thermocouples:

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07H5H1YV9/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1

CAinCA
CAinCA GRM+ Memberand HalfDork
11/10/21 3:54 p.m.

In reply to ShinnyGroove (Forum Supporter) :

That's very reasonable. Thanks for posting it.

Andy Hollis
Andy Hollis
4/4/22 6:36 a.m.

Solid work here, JG.  On the money with all points, and concisely delivered.

Some additions, if I may:

1) Regarding heat cycling: you allude to it when mentioning "preconditioning", but don't specifically call out the benefits of an initial heat cycle.  Many tires really need a solid initial heat cycle to deliver optimal grip.  We have noticed this in our tire testing and now incorporate a pre-test scrub/cycle day to allow all test tires to perform at their best during tests.  Yokohama A052, Falken RT660 and Nankang AR-1 are some that change dramatically after that first cycle.

2) There are two basic kinds of grip...the mechanical interlock that you describe, but also adhesive grip.  And while heat-induced softening for better mechanical grip is a hallmark of racing tires, so is adhesive grip.  The latter is something that street "motorsports" tires do not typically deliver.  Adhesive grip works on all surfaces, including those that are polished or smooth.  Think of it as "hot glue".  That's why the performance delta between street and race tires on some tracks is much larger than others.  COTA is a great example of this.  For more info on grip components, reference Paul Haney's book, The Racing and High Performance Tire.

3) Electric tire warmers can also be very helpful when you have a car that does not warm it's tires evenly.  On our One Lap CRX, we've been using a set of Chicken Hawks for over decade, but only on the rear of the car.  There is so little weight back there that the front tires come up to temp way before the rears.  This creates a vicious circle where the front is sticking well, but the rear has no grip to generate load to generate heat to generate grip.  Adding heat to the rears pre-session allows the fronts to come up to match nicely w/o the car trying to kill you.  We do this for NASA TT4 with Hoosier R7's.

4) That temp chart is super useful when you have variable weather throughout a weekend of sessions.  Even if you know your typical pressure rise, you need to account for different ambient starting points to hit those target absolute hot pressures.  This is especially true for overnight endurance racing like the Thunderhill 25H.  Pre-heating with electric tire blankets are one solution (we use these for the Honda team I crew chief for).  Or account for it manually. 

Noted IMSA crew chief and race engineer Jeff Braun, with thousands of hours of professional enduro experience,  suggests a simple rule of thumb...1 psi per 10 degrees of ambient temp.  So when you're watching those guys set pressures for the next pit stop during the frigid early morning hours (electric warmers are not allowed in IMSA) you'll know their secrets.

edmknapp
edmknapp New Reader
1/15/24 3:05 p.m.

In reply to stylngle2003 :

I see that offer to sell was a long time ago. I would buy one if still available.

stylngle2003
stylngle2003 GRM+ Memberand Reader
1/15/24 11:10 p.m.

In reply to edmknapp :

Sweet! Send an email to William.nolden at gmail and I'll send you some info about what I've still got. Thanks!

 

StuntmanMike
StuntmanMike New Reader
5/23/24 1:44 p.m.

I built this contraption for getting inner/center/outer temps all at once. It's not a high dollar setup so it's not instant accurate so i just hold it on the tire and count to 10, snap a pic and do all the tires then go back and look at the pics to analyze.

 

 

JG Pasterjak
JG Pasterjak Production/Art Director
5/24/24 9:50 a.m.
StuntmanMike said:

I built this contraption for getting inner/center/outer temps all at once. It's not a high dollar setup so it's not instant accurate so i just hold it on the tire and count to 10, snap a pic and do all the tires then go back and look at the pics to analyze.

 

 

I love him so much

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