Mike_B wrote:
willcove wrote:
Now the force on the outside of a tyre must be the same as the force on the inside of the tyre (if it were not, the tyre would change shape until it was), so the pressure exerted on the road is equal to the tyre pressure.
Not strictly true to my mind.
The force on the outside must be
less than the force on the inside.
Not really. The difference is marginal. The weight of the vehicle must be borne by an equal and opposite force from the road. This force will be equal to the pressure multiplied by the area of contact and it is the pressure and the weight of the vehicle that determines the contact area. For a normally inflated tyre, if the product of pressure and contact area is less than the weight it's supporting, the tyre "squishes" to increase the contact area until equilibrium is obtained. Conversely, if the product of pressure and contact area is greater than the weight, the tyre tends to restore it's unloaded shape so reducing the contact area until equilibrium is again restored.
Now attending to your example:
Quote:
If the bike tyre was inflated to 600psi (yes, I know it'll probably explode but, bear with me) it wouldn't suddenly be exerting 4 times the force on the road............
Since pressure (p) = force (w) / area (a), it follows that:
a = w/p
Let the contact area at 120 psi be a1 and at 600 psi be a2:
a1 = w/120 (1)
a2 = w/600 (2)
Therefore, from (1), w = 120 * a1 (3)
Substituting for w from (3) in (2):
a2 = 120 * a1 / 600
So a2 = a1 / 5
So, no, it wouldn't exert five times the force because the contact area would reduce to a fifth of what it was at the lower pressure. IOW, the tyre deforms to produce the contact area that results in the required force on the road.
HTH,