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#1
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pic: HiGrips after two events
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#2
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
2 or our 4 are almost gone with 2 events; we were only running for about half of the first event. With only about 4 or 5 hours of good practice they wear a lot faster then we thought they did. They still do their job well though.
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#3
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
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some teams may even opt for even softer wheels which would have to be replaced during the regional, in exchange for higher traction! |
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#4
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
Considering we replace our blue (nitrile) roughtop once per event (we could probably do once per two events if defense is light) at a cost of over $5 per wheel, these wheels (and the vex equivalent) are darn good values.
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#5
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
We are planning to swap out the higrips for custom wheels with blue nitrile. Just curious, why does it cost so much per wheel? We got our roughtop from Mcmaster at $1.60 a foot
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#6
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
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Once you account for some waste when cutting, and one or two treads scrapped per batch of 20-30, it's a tad over $5 a wheel for us. We have a father that is very meticulous cutting them. We could do a slightly more efficient cut and save maybe 20%, but the results he gets are worth it to us. |
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#7
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
About par for the course. We put two new center wheels on Thursday at Palmetto; this is what they looked like after the Orlando finals. (No pictures in between, but reportedly most of the wear was eliminations themselves.)
Haven't had it as bad in the corners, but we will have spares in St. Louis just to cover ourselves. |
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#8
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
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Last edited by Mike Marandola : 23-03-2014 at 23:44. |
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#9
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
Are your wheels wearing significantly? We also have 2" wide wheels, using the same McMaster nitrile, and we're soon to go into our third event with no tread changes. The wheels have little damage that I can see, and I can't really say that defense was light at either Inland or Sacramento.
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#10
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
Out of curiosity is there a noticeable change in traction between a new and worn (to this degree) wheel?
I would suspect that there's actually fairly little change if you were to measure it. I wouldn't even be surprised if the CoF increased slightly. |
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#11
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
My driver said that when the wheels became worn during the finals at Orlando he had a much harder time pushing teams. All six teams in the finals at Orlando had 6CIM drive trains. Now I'm not sure if it was the wheels at that point or if the team he tried to push was down-shifting.
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#12
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
I was in the pit of one of the teams attending their 3rd district event this weekend that were using the white tread hi-grips and after their first couple of matches they were wondering why they were now getting pushed around when they used to be the ones pushing others around. Their wheels looks almost identical to the one pictured. After they changed them they were back to pushing people around. So based on that I'd say that their coefficient of friction is way down when they look like that.
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#13
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
Surface area does not have an effect the friction. I would think it would lose grip because the tread pattern provides some mechanical grip on the carpet.
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#14
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
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Here is a link to one of the numerous posts I've made on the subject: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...4&postcount=23 It comes down to something called "mechanical keying" in the racecar world (where this sort of interaction is investigated in great detail). Basically as a wheel is loaded more and more the mechanical interlocking of the tire's tread into its driving surface eventually saturates and then the calculated coefficient of friction is reduced as the wheel is loaded more. This isn't a step change, but a gradual progression as wheel load is increased. There have been teams who've tested 1in wide vs 2in wide wheels and found that 2in wide wheels provide a higher coefficient of friction. There have been teams (including one this year) that test larger diameter wheels as generating more friction, presumably due to a larger contact patch and thus lower contact pressure. |
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#15
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Re: pic: HiGrips after two events
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