Kapan ban Michelin tanpa udara ini mampir di
Indonesia?

Salam,
RM 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

January 3, 2005
TECHNOLOGY 
Reinventing the Wheel (and the Tire, Too)
By NORMAN MAYERSOHN 
 
REENVILLE, S.C.

THE first automobile to use air-filled tires was a
racecar built by André and Édouard Michelin in the
early 1890's. More than a century later, the French
company founded by the Michelin brothers is so
identified with pneumatic tires that its mascot,
Bibendum, is a man made of little else. 

Now, after decades spent persuading the world to ride
on air, the company has begun work on an innovation
that could render the pneumatic tire obsolete.
Engineers at Michelin's American technology center
here envision a future in which vehicles would ride on
what they call the Tweel, a combined tire and wheel
that could never go flat because it contains no air.

Arriving at a conference room recently to explain the
development project, a research engineer, Bart
Thompson, used the Segway Human Transporter that he
rode to the meeting to illustrate his points. Aboard
this high-tech visual aid - one of those
self-balancing electric scooters best remembered for
the optimistic claim that it would reinvent personal
transportation - Mr. Thompson whizzed down the hallway
and out to the lobby, pirouetting among the benches
and planters to demonstrate the flexibility of the
Tweel.

To be sure, the Segway would be a very small market
for Michelin, the world's leading tiremaker, but it is
an apt demonstration vehicle for the Tweel. The first
commercial use of the integrated tire and wheel
assembly will be on the stair-climbing iBOT
wheelchair, another product developed by Dean Kamen,
the Segway's inventor; Michelin said it would announce
another application at the Detroit auto show next
week.

The tiremaker has high expectations for the Tweel
project. The concept of a single-piece tire and wheel
assembly is one the company expects to spread to
passenger cars and, eventually, to construction
equipment and aircraft. 

The Tweel offers a number of benefits beyond the
obvious attraction of being impervious to nails in the
road. The tread will last two to three times as long
as today's radial tires, Michelin says, and when it
does wear thin it can be retreaded. 

For manufacturers, the Tweel offers an opportunity to
reduce the number of parts, eliminating most of the 23
components of a typical new tire as well as the costly
air-pressure monitors that will soon be required on
new vehicles in the United States. 

In recent years, manufacturers have devoted an
increasing amount of attention to tires that let
motorists continue driving after a puncture, for 100
miles or more, at a reduced speed. Several such "run
flat" designs are now available, providing convenience
and peace of mind for travelers as well as freeing
automakers to eliminate the weight and cost of spare
tires. 

Michelin, which markets run-flat tires under the Pax
name, took a different approach in developing the
Tweel. Its goal: a replacement for traditional tires
that is designed to function without air in the first
place. 

Mounted on a car, the Tweel is a single unit, though
it actually begins as an assembly of four pieces
bonded together: the hub, a polyurethane spoke
section, a "shear band" surrounding the spokes, and
the tread band - the rubber layer that wraps around
the circumference and touches the pavement.

While the Tweel's hub functions as it would in a
normal wheel - a rigid attachment point to the axle -
the polyurethane spokes are flexible to help absorb
road impacts. The shear band surrounding the spokes
effectively takes the place of the air pressure,
distributing the load. The tread is similar in
appearance to a conventional tire. 

One of the basic shortcomings of a tire filled with
air is that the inflation pressure is distributed
equally around the tire, both up and down (vertically)
as well as side-to side (laterally). That property
keeps the tire round, but it also means that raising
the pressure to improve cornering - increasing lateral
stiffness - also adds up-down stiffness, making the
ride harsher.

With the Tweel's injection-molded spokes, those
characteristics are no longer linked - a point of
particular excitement to an engineer like Mr. Thompson
because of the potential it holds for improving
handling response. The spokes can be engineered to
give the Tweel five times as much lateral stiffness as
current pneumatic tires without any loss of ride
comfort. 

The Tweel auto project is in its infancy - "Version
1.0," Mr. Thompson said - and only a single set of car
Tweels exist. A test drive in a Tweel-equipped Audi A4
sedan on roads around Michelin's research center
proved to be far less exotic than the construction
method or appearance would suggest. The prototype
Tweels are noisy, as Mr. Thompson warned they would
be, a problem traced to vibration in the spokes. 

The Tweels also transmit more of the feel of a coarse
road surface than customers would tolerate in a
production tire, but the level is understandable
considering the early stage of development. More
important, the steering's response as the driver
begins a turn is excellent, and large bumps were
swallowed up easily by the Tweels and the Audi's
unmodified suspension.

There are other negatives: the flexibility, at this
stage, contributes to greater friction, though it is
within 5 percent of that generated by a conventional
radial tire. And so far, the Tweel is no lighter than
the tire and wheel it replaces.

Almost everything else about the Tweel is undetermined
at this early stage of development, including serious
matters like cost and frivolous questions like the
possibilities of chrome-plating. 

Logical uses - military vehicles, for example - would
come years before automobiles, but Michelin's business
projections accommodate the possibility that the Tweel
may not be an overnight success. This would be nothing
new for Michelin: the radial tire it invented in 1946
was not widely accepted in the United States until the
1970's. 



The New York Times 


***************************************************************************
Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. www.ppi-india.uni.cc
***************************************************************************
__________________________________________________________________________
Mohon Perhatian:

1. Harap tdk. memposting/reply yg menyinggung SARA (kecuali sbg otokritik)
2. Pesan yg akan direply harap dihapus, kecuali yg akan dikomentari.
3. Lihat arsip sebelumnya, www.ppi-india.da.ru; 
4. Forum IT PPI-India: http://www.ppiindia.shyper.com/itforum/
5. Satu email perhari: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
6. No-email/web only: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
7. kembali menerima email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Kirim email ke