2kwik4u
Jetboaters Fleet Admiral
- Messages
- 7,720
- Reaction score
- 10,223
- Points
- 577
- Location
- Buffalo, NY
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2017
- Boat Model
- AR
- Boat Length
- 19
Contact pressure between tire and pavement is directly related to footprint. Less pressure in the tire increases footprint and decreases contact pressure. Contact pressure is the same units a air pressure. Pounds per square inch. A vehicle has a given weight on an axle, if you increase surface area you decrease contact pressure.I agree that deflation increases contact area, critical to improve traction on a slippery surface like a boat ramp. I don't follow the relation between contact pressure and PSI. Add some weight to the truck bed to increase the contact pressure and lower your PSI by 1/3-2/3
For example, if you have 2,000lbf on an axle, and you have 2 tires on that axle each tire carries 1,000lbf. Say each tire has a contact patch of 1in^2. Each tire has a contact pressure of 1,000psi. NOW, deflate each tire by 50% and get an increase of 25% in contact patch. You now have 1,000lbf per 1.25in^2 or 800psi.
We are taught in general physics that friction force (traction in this case) is defined as a factor times the normal force (1,000lbf). F = k*N. Now, that k factor is a general catch all that takes mechanical keying, surface interactions like electron bonding and adhesion, as well as other factors into account. It's far more complex of an interaction than just a simple multiplier. However, in general, as you lower contact pressure, you lower that k value.
This makes sense both intuitively and by example. We know if we push our hand harder against a surface it's more difficult to move than if you push less. You can develop the same mathematics here except you are varying force instead of contact patch. Likewise, we know from drag racing that given a particular compound of tire, the wider you go the less grip you have to accelerate. 60ft times in fast accelerating vehicles decrease when adding width to the tires (assuming you keep similar compounds).
Moral of the story here is that additional contact patch rarely results in better traction if all other variables are held constant. In practice, airing down will likely decrease traction on a slippery ramp.