Ron Spencer wrote:
Shaving a street tire DOES remove the mold release compound. Or more specifically the rubber which has it on/ in it.
So what exactly do you accomplish by heat cycling a street tire?
You don't heat cycle a race tire to get rid of the mold release stuff. That's a side benefit. You heat cycle the tire to activate the chemical reaction we've already talked about. Its this change that leads to the longer life of the tire.
Street tires already have a long life so heat cycling them does nothing. ....except burn off the mold release stuff. That's why I'm not calling it a heat cycle.
I have the feeling we are now officially running around in circles:)
R
I guess we disagree on the idea that, disregarding the mold release issue, there is no chemical or molecular change in a street tire when heat is first put into them. I think there is. I don't think that the compounds of street tires are so far removed from those of race tires that the same chemical processes would not apply. A top line street tire must share a lot of its technology with a race tire in order to maximize grip. I agree that there will be concessions to wear that would not be made in a race tire, but I think that those would not be so great as to make heat cycling not work in the same way.
Does an A032R or RA-1 require heat cycling? If not, then obviously I am wrong. However, if they do, I cannot see why a tire like an Azeni, which in reality would not provide significantly greater street mileage life, would not also benefit from heat cycling.