Bracing for Heavier Steer Tire Loads
We know batteries will add to the tare weight of a truck. What’s not certain yet is how that weight will be distributed. From a load and inflation perspective, there’s lots of headroom with drive tires, but hardly at all with steer tires.
Inflated to 100 psi, most common drive tires for Class 8 trucks can accommodate around 5,600 pounds of load. Given that a legally loaded drive tire maxes out at 4,250 pounds, weight isn’t an issue.
But many trucks are now running 13,200- to 14,000-pound steer axles with load range H tires inflated to 120 psi — and they are maxed out. So, if truck makers put much of the battery load up front, tire makers may have to upsize their steer tires to handle the additional load.
That could mean switching from a 22.5- to a 24-inch tire or increasing the width of the tread face to 12 or 12.5 inches (300-315 mm), up from the current 11 or 11.5 inches (275-295 mm). In either case, the larger casing would accommodate a larger volume of air, which is what actually supports the load.
Fleets and truck makers, however, might be reluctant to accept a radical change in tire size. A 24-inch wheel would be a non-standard size, which would create inventory issues. Going to a taller tire might upset the carefully designed tire clearance specs for hoods and suspensions.
A likely alternative would be a wider tire.
“Upsizing the tire width gives you the extra carrying capacity while keeping the rim diameter at 22.5 inches,” says Ma-hesh Kavaturu, Goodyear’s commercial technology director. “That’s what is happening already with transit buses. They’re going from 305 to 315 mm tires. And we are also reinforcing the construction to take on additional loads beyond where even the 315 is today.”
Most motor coaches and charter buses now run 315 mm steer tires at about 130 psi. That could be what we’ll see on Class 8 BEVs in the near future.
Goodyear expects to see a similar trend on steer tires for lighter vehicles, too, the Class 5 and 6 delivery vans. The chassis packaging is evolving, says Kavaturu.
“In some cases, the batteries go up front, which will put more loads on the on the steer tires. So, with respect to upsizing, we may see tires evolve from 16- and 17.5-inch to 19-inch. That would depend on the OEM.”