Shaping a tyre tread is endeavour in balance between engineering and appearance. In brief, a tyre must be "gripping and beautiful" The shape cannot be just visually attractive because more importantly it must provide the most grip and operating constancy on the road as intended in design and construction.
Experience of Indag Rubber Ltd.
The tyre-road contact area can hardly be taken for granted and it is not even similar from manufacturer to manufacturer. Each manufacturer has its own principles, engineering needs, care for detail, style and goals to be achieved. Precisely for this reason, each product has a precise, sophisticated and carefully designed pattern according to the intended use of the tyre and its construction materials. These elements make it possible to obtain the best efficiency in terms of safety and road efficiency with a focus on fuel consumption and running costs. The latter key aspect is held in the highest consideration by users of vehicles. The tread pattern distributed on the most crucial area of the tyre, which only slightly larger than the palm of an adult's hand, is fundamental for a number of reasons. These may be summarised also in terms of high driving quality and safety in tricky conditions.
On dry roads, for instance, a tread designed to provide rigidity will allow the tyre to transmit confidence on corners and ensure very effective holding. A result like this is achieved also considering other factors, such as the limited presence of grooves and the use of large-sized blocks which contribute to amplifying the rigidity of the structure and consequently a contact surface aimed at providing the best possible traction. Conversely, the presence of more marked grooves and sipes amplifies water discharge at various speeds to the advantage of safety in case of rain. In this case, the different tread design – directional, asymmetrical or symmetrical – determines the degree of water evacuation and improves the balance or the tendency to privilege multiple aspects, such as high performance and efficiency constancy, which characterise the various pattern types.
Finally, symmetrical tyres, as the name suggests, have the same pattern across the entire tyre. The same shape on the inside and outside means high levels of efficiency, speed and road safety.
The tyre tread patterns are fundamental for improving the vehicle and its performance on the road. They influence and lower the rolling resistance and the wet traction and, depending on the type of tyres used, they lower the width of suspension. Car manufacturers are producing tread patterns to guarantee an ever increasing level of performance and change the quality of driving: for example, they are developing tread patterns for electric cars which employ ground energy or, other kind of tyres that increase the maximum weight supported by trucks and all kind of vehicles. The tread pattern also influences the temperature of the tyre in touch with the road and some special patterns are able to lower the heat of the tyre for a more performant drive.