The Swedish and Norwegian rounds of the WRC take place on snow and
ice for which the sport's governing body (FIA, Fédération
Internationale de l'Automobile) permits the use of studded tyres.
For both events, the grip produced by these studs - which measure no
more than 20mm in length - enables the WRC cars to reach speeds of
up to 200kph!
With
the exception of 1973, when the regulations banned studded tyres,
studs have always played a decisive role on the Swedish Rally,
allowing the cars to take the event's icy country or forest lanes at
truly incredible speeds. Anyone who hasn't spectated or driven on
the stages would have difficulty believing just how much grip is
provided by these tiny metal tips which have been especially
developed for rallying.
"The
grip they give is identical, if not superior to that we have on
gravel rallies,"
says three-time World Champion and 2004 Swedish Rally winner
Sébastien Loeb (Citroën/BFGoodrich).
"Even though the conditions are so
slippery, our studded tyres enable us to brake extremely late and
corner particularly hard. It's simply gob smacking at first."
"Our
data shows that the cars benefit from more lateral grip and stopping
power on ice than they do on gravel,"
confirms one engineer. "The grip
ensured by the studs on sheet ice is equivalent to that of a rain
tyre on smooth, wet asphalt. That said, traction is less good than
on gravel."
In the 1970s, the regulations were significantly more liberal in
terms of studs. The so-called
pyramido tyres bristled with 600 studs each and their
tips formed a sort of claw. The studs were inserted from the inside
of the casing and could be angled with a spanner. In the 30 or so
years since, things have evolved a great deal.
Today's
BFGoodrich
g-Force Ice tyres come with 'only' 384 studs
each. Strict FIA regulations specify that the studs must be of a
cylindrical form with a maximum length of 20mm and a maximum weight
of 4g. Their diameter may be no more than 9mm at their base and no
less than 2.5mm in their middle section. The studs themselves must
be inserted into the blocks from the outside. The FIA also dictates
a maximum number of studs per
tyre: 20 for every 10cm of the tyre's
circumference which, in the case of the g-Force Ice, amounts to 384
studs per
tyre. According to tyre pressure, the cars sit on between
18 and 20 studs per tyre, i.e. between 70 and 80 for the entire car.
For the past two Swedish Rallies (and this year Norway), the FIA has
authorised just one tread pattern. Given the fact that snowploughs
now pass trough the stages before and during the rally, the drivers
opt for the so-called 'ice' pattern, the g-Force Ice, the
longitudinal blocks of which optimise traction and braking, while
the oblique blocks contribute to the tyres' outstanding cornering
grip. The g-Force Ice is 40 per cent narrower than an asphalt WRC
tyre 145mm/225mm) in order to increase the pressure exerted on the
contact patch by the car's weight.
More than the pattern, however, it is the studs (which strike the
ice 17 times per second at 120kph) that play the most decisive role
on Scandinavia's winter fixtures. The studs of BFGoodrich's tyres
are glued inside the tread blocks, a delicate operation
necessitating approximately 15 minutes per
tyre and which is carried
out by the Swedish company Däckproffsen. The tyres are produced in
France and then sent to Däckproffsen who drill the tread blocks and
insert the studs. Performance depends on the quality of the bonding
between the metal studs and the rubber blocks.
Although it specifies a maximum length of 20mm for the studs, the
FIA makes no restrictions concerning the proportion of the stud that
protrudes from the tread block.
BFGoodrich
proposes three options
regarding protrusion length: 'short stud' (5.5mm), 'normal stud'
(6.5mm) and 'long stud' (7mm). In the case of a normal stud, 6.5mm
of metal stand proud of the block and 13.5mm are glued inside the
tyre. As a rule, drivers go for the long stud option in snowy
conditions with a view to the stud piercing the top-coating of fresh
snow and biting into the ice underneath. The normal stud option is
used on sheet ice, while the short stud is only chosen in the case
of stones mixed with frozen gravel.
The outcome of last weekend's Swedish Rally was decided when
Grönholm and Loeb went for different stud options for SS11 and 12
which were predominantly icy with little snow covering. Marcus
Grönholm opted for the normal stud (6.5mm), while Sébastien Loeb
went for the long stud (7mm). The difference of 0.5mm may seem
insignificant but the drivers can definitely feel it at the
wheel.
"The extra 0.5mm produces a corresponding increase in the contact
patch of about 11 per cent which has a considerable influence on
traction and road holding,"
explains
BFGoodrich
developer Thierry Kindt.
"Now you could be forgiven for
thinking that the more metal you have protruding from the tread the
better performance will be, but this is not the case because certain
limits apply."