Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

R888s cold at 22psi all round. A warm up lap or two then destroyed one of the tyres as i started to push a little. The instructors said that the tyre failed because 22psi is too low and I probably pulled one side off the rim. Said I need start on at 26psi, heat them up, then bleed back to the desired hot pressure. Is that a thing? I haven't heard of it before.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/461581-destroyed-r888-too-low-pressure/
Share on other sites

R888s cold at 22psi all round. A warm up lap or two then destroyed one of the tyres as i started to push a little. The instructors said that the tyre failed because 22psi is too low and I probably pulled one side off the rim. Said I need start on at 26psi, heat them up, then bleed back to the desired hot pressure. Is that a thing? I haven't heard of it before.

What was left of the thing by the time you pulled up/got back? Yes it is possible (Although Id reckon unlikely) to pull the bead off the rim if you went really hard on low pressure and hit a kerb etc. Maybe warm them up at a slower rate would be better. The other way works too but is a lot of stuffing around.

But all up it sounds unlikely. The things were stretched on the rims I trust?

  • Like 1

They are 255/35 on R34 GTR 9 inch rims, which is my old track setup. I was going to use them until they wore out and then put something like Hankook RS-3s on for street.

Here's what was left

gallery_15274_3064_101695.jpg

well, 22 definitely isn't too low for a starting pressure, but like djr said you might have been unlucky while warming up, especially since it failed immediately. It's easy to add 10psi to a tyre on a heavy car once it is working hard

I'd ask toyo in this case.

  • Like 1

For heavy cars (1400kg+) Toyo recommend 27-35psi cold for the R888 here: http://www.toyo.co.uk/page/index/identifier/set-up-advice

23281463519_5bba55f943.jpg

I'm definitely no expert but 22psi does sound pretty low on a GT-R.

  • Like 2

Very interesting, thanks for posting that up. The Kumho v70s like very high pressures (45ish) as well.

I have to say though, there is a huge leap in target pressure between a 1000 and 1400kg car, and while I don't know more than the manufacturer I wonder if they recommend that high because they tyres can fail otherwise (at the cost of performance, as many have pointed out about these tyres on a skyline...)

The other thing that table tells us is 17psi is not too low for a starting pressure....

Well there you go - thanks V28.

And i was thinking that 30-32 hot was what i should be aiming for. I think i'm going to have to get something to check hot temperature across the tread and work it out for myself.

  • Like 1

Response from Toyo - no clear answer to this, which is good in a way - I don't feel like an idiot anymore.

"Hi Adam,

What sort of failure?
It sounds like the failure was casing disintegration?

22psi cold is good, 30hot hot is spot on
Assuming you checked the pressures that day and the failure was casing disintegration, the only logical cause is a puncture.

Regards,



Steven Burke

Tyre Technical Manager | Toyo Tyre & Rubber Australia Limited"

The other thing that table tells us is 17psi is not too low for a starting pressure....

Not for an 800kg car. But an 800kg car will cause much less sidewall flex and much less heat generated in the canvas of the tyre. Do the same thing in a 1600kg tyre and you will be rolling around on the sidewalls.

Probably better to err on the side of caution and start with a slightly higher cold pressure and bleed air to maintain target hot pressure.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Well, this is probably where a wiring diagram and a multimeter come into play.
    • I can say to anyone thats doing this; having done a number of R clusters; just be careful if its an unknown cluster.  It takes a bit of force to pull up; but if it feels excessive then its probably stuck. I've had this and pulled the entire hair spring out; and I can tell you; its not easy getting the correct spring replacement with the correct inner diameter and winding. In my case someone had used some sort of adhesive to stick it to the spindle and it pulled the whole spindle out; which the force seperated the hairspring from the spindal and caused it to deform.  You may have to clean it (IPA); or in my case if i'd known i should have used some sort of solvent on it.  Also check out Cruizin Central on eBay. He does all sorts of dials; and you can email him with any custom designs you want. So if you want like certain logos etc...he'll send you a mock of what it will look like then you accept the order and he'll take care of the rest. Fantastic dials and he can do basically any design you want. 
    • Have you confirmed its the actual axles? Also the wheel bearings that mount on the hubs to hold the axles wear out. I replaced mine as they got play in them. It sorted my play issue. 
    • Ive converted a few clusters for the R33 with 320km/h dials. On the back there are some pads which can be bridged or unbridged (using solder or wick braid) to calibrate it. There is one bridge which is for MPH <> KPH; and there are combinations of bridges to offset it. There is probably a diagram  For example; this is my conversion for a 180km/h dial to a 320km/h dial (I put custom GT-R dials on it with the GTS25t layout) If you have J2 soldered (assuming the S clusters have a similar config to the R clusters); you may need to remove that solder
    • Back on topic 😉, these are some of the notable pages from the booklets that are supplied with each weekly parts update. I never knew the BNR32 test mule car had an S13 Silvia front end... *Edit: On closer inspection the test car still had the R32 body, but only the front end had Silvia panels etc.
×
×
  • Create New...