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Tire ideas
I found Bondo's "how to unglue tires" thread/video informative, but my issue is gluing them in the first place! I either use too little glue and they come apart, or too much and the excess drips down the sidewall or gets into the tire and hardens the foam inside. Either way, not pretty. And that's not even mentioning when I don't get the rubber edge lined up just right and there are little "arc" where it's not touching the rim. Arrgg!
And then there's the ballooning thing. Duct tape works sometimes, but comes apart. Using air filled tires would be nice, but doesn't look like it's gonna happen anytime soon. And a blowout is a definite possibility. On onroad cars, foams work, but they are relatively hard to find, expensive, and don't last too long (at least in my experience). What I really want is a solid rubber tire. Yeah, it'll be too hard to perform well, but I prefer longevity. These tires/rims are expensive (overly so if you ask me)! And a solid tire will not balloon nearly as much. These aren't available either. So, what about filling the tire with something liquid that hardens with around the same consistency as hotglue? Would be heavier, but again, I value longevity. |
You could try that expanding foam. It would need a very precise amount per tire but it dries to the consistency of hard tire foams.
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Premounts!
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I 3rd the "premount" notion.
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If you had pneumatic tires they would bounce like a basketball.
Maybe a magical rubber compund could be created. One that was lightweight, long lasting, spongy (like foam) and cheap. It could be just a solid tire made of this magical foam. |
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I'm mainly interested in onroad tires, but something decent for any tire (truggy, buggy, etc) would be nice too. As long as I'm not pumping them with 30psi or something, they shouldn't bounce.
"Magic" foam sounds good, but probably not a viable solution at this time. My magic wand is fresh out of pixie dust. :wink: I've thought of things like filling the tires with hotglue, to using fiberglass resin. Both of these would probably work, but would be far too heavy, especially the resin. Expanding foam may work, but in my experience, it tends to be uncontrolled and may expand too much. |
Expanding foam could be an option as long as it can be distributed equally throughout the tire and in an equal consistency. My fear would be the foam causes horrible balance problems....
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lol, my tires may end up looking deformed with bulges and voids all over the place.
Any idea where something is sprayed or poured in would involve a process where the tire is inserted into some kind of holder to keep its shape until the filler cures/dries/cools. |
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We had a vendor come in a couple years ago and they claimed they were a year away from releasing a closed cell foam tire for the automotive industry, and they were looking at developing industrial casters with that same stuff. Lightweight and never goes flat. But I havent seen hide nor hair of them since. They even left me a small cross section of the tire - but I threw all of that out a while back. I'll have to dig around with some of my suppliers to see if they are still going down that road. Brian - just glue the living snot out of them, run it through the dirt and get some good road rash on the sides of the tires. Then never clean them. Good to go! |
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the ebay alternatives! I found a guy who sells pre-mounted knockoff badlands, and it was like $18 for all 4, shipped from florida. The rims broke kinda easily, but the tires last forever. I bought them quite a while ago and never had to buy another pair of tires since. Unless you race, its truly the way to go. i leave tiretracks all over the place, and the tires barely show any wear!
also, IMO the AKA tires seem to last alot longer than the proline, and are some pretty high quality stuff too. they also use closed cell foam. that with LPR wheels and tires, and ballooning should be a thing of the past... Well, it still balloons, but not much at all. no pizza cutters. nothing close to pizza cutters. there's not much i know about touring cars, but I believe the same concepts above could be applied. and on the whole expanding foam issue, why not spray the foam in before you glue the tires? then if there is any bulgy area you can use an xacto and trim it out. once it fits nice and snug, glue it up! |
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What's_nitro: I did think of that. Basically, put in a few sheets of f-glass cloth and then enough f-glass resin to liberally coat the inside of the tire and spin in continuously until it cures. That should provide a nice 1/16"-1/8" thick coat of resin to stiffen the whole tire without adding as much weight as totally filling it. I also thought about getting some plastidip (in a can, not the spray) and pouring it in there, but I don't think it will ever harden. I need something that needs to be mixed so it cures via chemical reaction rather than air-dry seeing as it will be contained inside the tire and airflow is minimal if any. |
I had a set of these, they lasted a very long time and supplied good grip. I crashed once and tore a tire and got a peek inside, almost solid rubber. The foam is tiny little strip.
And the price is right ? http://cgi.ebay.com/NIB-On-Road-Slic...d=p3911.c0.m14 |
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