Tyres - round and black - but why?
There are few things in life that people don't question. One is why wheels are round (a topic for another week 🍒if you're unlucky) and another is that tyres are black - but why?
Most people think of tyres as black rubber but it's not the rubber that makes them black - carbon black powder is the critical ingredient that not just gives the colour but also provides the structural strength that tyres need - both on the road and t💮he race track.
There are few things in life that people don't question. One is why wheels 🍨are r👍ound (a topic for another week if you're unlucky) and another is that tyres are black - but why?
Most people think of tyres as black rubber but it's not the rubber that makes them black - carbon black powder is the critical ingredient that not just gives thꦬe colour but also provides the structural strength that tyres need - both on the road and the race track.
A tyre typically contains around 30% of꧒ carbon black which is one of the most critical ingredients in tyre construction. Simply, it is manufactured by burning crude oil and manufacturers around the world offer ever-impr♏oving qualities.
The burning process produces 'grains'. These are round but the best quality is when the grains resemble meteorites and have a larger surface area. Dunlop continually assesses the carbon black on offe♈r to get the best product for each application.
All tyres conta💖in an element of carbon black but it is now possible to produce coloured tyres by 💃using a high proportion of a silica compound that can be pigmented to produce the required colour. This doesn't have the strength properties that a higher level of carbon black affords but can have useful applications such as promotional activities.
Unlike the respo🌞nse to Henry Forꦇd's 'any colour so long as it's black', tyre producers are not looking to provide high volumes of alternatives - so black and round is here to stay.