Radial Tyre Production
1. Radial Tyre manufacturing starts
with many kinds of raw materials, pigments, chemicals,
some 30; different kinds of
rubber,
cord fabrics, bead wire, etc. The process begins with
the mixing of basic rubbers with process
oils,
carbon black, pigments,antioxidants,accelerators and
other additives, each of which contributes
certain properties to the compound.
These ingredients are mixed in giant blenders called
Banbury machines operating under tremendous
heat and pressure. They blend the many ingredients together
into a hot, black gummy compound that will be milled
again and again.
2. The cooled rubber takes several
forms. Most often it is processed into carefully identified
slabs that will be transported to breakdown mills. These
mills feed the rubber between massive pairs of rollers,
over and over, feeding, mixing and blending to prepare
the different compounds for the feed mills, where they
are slit into strips and carried by conveyor belts to
become sidewalls, treads or other parts of the Tyre.
Still another kind of rubber coats the fabric that will
be used to make up the Tyre's body. The fabrics come
in huge rolls, and they are as specialized and critical
as the rubber blends. Many kinds of
fabrics
are used:
polyester, rayon or nylon.
Most of today's passenger Tyres have polyester cord
bodies
3. Another component, shaped like
a hoop, is called a
bead. It has high-tensile
steel wire forming its backbone, which will fit against
the vehicle's wheel rim. The strands are aligned into
a ribbon coated with rubber for adhesion, then wound
into loops that are then wrapped together to secure
them until they are assembled with the rest of the Tyre.
Radial Tyres are built on one or two Tyre machines.
The Tyre starts with a double layer of synthetic gum
rubber called an
innerliner that will
seal in air and make the Tyre tubeless.
4. Next come two layers of ply fabric,
the
cords. Two strips called
apexes
stiffen the area just above the bead. Next, a pair of
chafer strips is added, so called because
they resist chafing from the wheel rim when mounted
on a car.
The Tyre building machine pre-shapes
radial Tyres into a form very close to their final dimension
to make sure the many components are in proper position
before the Tyre goes into the mold.
5. Now the Tyre builder adds the
steel
belts that resist punctures and hold the tread
firmly against the road. The
tread
is the last part to go on the Tyre. After automatic
rollers press all the parts firmly together, the radial
Tyre, now called a
green Tyre, is ready
for inspection and curing.
6. The curing press is where Tyres
get their final shape and tread pattern. Hot molds like
giant waffle irons shape and vulcanize the Tyre. The
molds are engraved with the tread pattern, the sidewall
markings of the manufacturer and those required by law.
Tyres are cured at over
300 degrees for 12 to
25 minutes, depending on their size. As the
press swings open, the Tyres are popped from their molds
onto a long conveyor that carries them to
final
finish and inspection.
7. If anything is wrong with the Tyre
- if anything even seems to be wrong with the Tyre,
even the slightest blemish - it is rejected. Some flaws
are caught by an inspector's trained eyes and hands;
others are found by specialized machines.
Inspection doesn't stop at the surface.
Some Tyres are pulled from the production line and
X-
rayed to detect any hidden weaknesses or internal
failures. In addition, quality control engineers regularly
cut apart randomly chosen Tyres and study every detail
of their construction that affects performance, ride
or safety.
8. This is how all the parts come together:
the tread and sidewall, supported by the body, and held
to the wheel by the rubber-coated steel bead. But whatever
the details, the basics are fundamentally the same:
steel, fabric, rubber, and lots of work and care, design
and engineering.
Basic Ingredients To Make
A Tyre
Fabric steel, nylon, aramid fiber,
rayon, fiberglass, or polyester (usually a combination,
e.g., polyester fabric in the body plies and steel fabric
in the belts and beads of most radial passenger Tyres)
Rubber -- natural and synthetic (hundreds
of polymer types)
Reinforcing chemicals -- carbon black,
silica, resins
Anti-degradants -- antioxidants, ozonants,
paraffin waxes
Adhesion promoters -- cobalt salts,
brass on wire, resins on fabrics
Curatives -- cure accelerators, activators,
sulfur
Processing aids -- oils, tackifiers,
peptizers, softeners
A P195/75R14 all-season passenger
Tyre, the most popular size, weighs about 21 pounds
and has approximately:
5 lbs. of 30 different types of
synthetic rubber
4 lbs. of 8 types of natural rubber
5 lbs. of 8 types of carbon black
1 lbs. of steel cord for belts
1 lb. of polyester and nylon
1 lb. of steel bead wire
3 lbs. of 40 different kinds of chemicals,
waxes, oils, pigments, etc.
Typical percentages of the Synthetic Rubber
and Natural Rubber rubber mix in various types of
tyres:
Passenger Tyre 55% 45%
Light Truck Tyre 50% 50%
Race Tyre 65% 35%
Off-highway Tyre 20% 80% (giant/earthmover)

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