Development for an Aged Tire Durability Standard - Steady State DOE Study

2008-01-1493

04/14/2008

Event
SAE World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
In the work leading to the TREAD Act, some members of Congress expressed the need for some type of aging test on light vehicle tires. Since no industry-wide recommended practice existed, the ASTM F09.30 Aged Tire Durability task group was established in 2002 to develop a scientifically valid, short duration, laboratory aged tire durability test which correlates to in-service aging. The target end-of-test condition was belt edge separation (or related tire conditions). One strategy, driven by that objective, has been a Steady State DOE investigating aging temperature and duration, as well as, roadwheel speed, pressure and deflection. Testing was performed on three tire types, including two where relevant field aging data was publicly available from NHTSA studies. A region of interest, within the design space, was identified where target end-of-test conditions were possible and undesirable (non-target or non-representative of those seen in consumer use) were avoided. A specific test condition has been proposed and carried forward for validation over a broad cross-section of tires sizes.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2008-01-1493
Pages
13
Citation
Altman, R., Stalnaker, D., Howland, D., Popio, J. et al., "Development for an Aged Tire Durability Standard - Steady State DOE Study," SAE Technical Paper 2008-01-1493, 2008, https://doi.org/10.4271/2008-01-1493.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 14, 2008
Product Code
2008-01-1493
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English