yoshimitsuspeed
Automotive
- Jan 5, 2011
- 191
Any tire shop will tell you if you mess up one tire on your AWD you automatically need to replace all of them. I know that's not necessarily true but I am trying to find some parameters of what would be acceptable variance and what could be bad for the drivetrain.
It occurred to me one big factor would be if the car has 0,1 or two LSDs.
If there is variance between left and right tires but the average is about the same front to rear then it seems to me it wouldn't be much of an issue with a car with open diffs.
If you had a rear LSD it seems to me you could match the rear tires as closely as possible then put the two most opposing tires up front. The open diff would take up that variance and the center diff would see very little.
I am also assuming realistically you should be able to measure tire circumference and get close enough to make a solid assessment on whether the variance would be within a safe range or not.
So what are peoples thoughts on what would be acceptable range and how would that range be affected by a car with 0,1 or 2 LSDs?
If I did my math right if you have a tire 25" in dia and one that's 25.25" which would be a pretty noticeable difference in size that's a 1% difference in circumference right? And should equate to the diff slipping about 14 RPM at 80 mph right?
An open diff would have no problem. The only issue would be the center diff but say three tires were 25" and one was 25.25 then there would only be a half percent difference on the average of front tires and rear tires. The RPM and slippage of the center diff would be dependent on the final drive ratio but whatever the case the center diff would be seeing a pretty minimal amount of slippage.
Even if those odd sized tires had an LSD it seems to me 14 RPM slippage wouldn't be catastrophic. Sure it might lead to slightly faster wear but would it be significant?
So what's a safe range for tire variance in an AWD?
It occurred to me one big factor would be if the car has 0,1 or two LSDs.
If there is variance between left and right tires but the average is about the same front to rear then it seems to me it wouldn't be much of an issue with a car with open diffs.
If you had a rear LSD it seems to me you could match the rear tires as closely as possible then put the two most opposing tires up front. The open diff would take up that variance and the center diff would see very little.
I am also assuming realistically you should be able to measure tire circumference and get close enough to make a solid assessment on whether the variance would be within a safe range or not.
So what are peoples thoughts on what would be acceptable range and how would that range be affected by a car with 0,1 or 2 LSDs?
If I did my math right if you have a tire 25" in dia and one that's 25.25" which would be a pretty noticeable difference in size that's a 1% difference in circumference right? And should equate to the diff slipping about 14 RPM at 80 mph right?
An open diff would have no problem. The only issue would be the center diff but say three tires were 25" and one was 25.25 then there would only be a half percent difference on the average of front tires and rear tires. The RPM and slippage of the center diff would be dependent on the final drive ratio but whatever the case the center diff would be seeing a pretty minimal amount of slippage.
Even if those odd sized tires had an LSD it seems to me 14 RPM slippage wouldn't be catastrophic. Sure it might lead to slightly faster wear but would it be significant?
So what's a safe range for tire variance in an AWD?