Originally Posted By: rpn453
Originally Posted By: Quattro Pete
Originally Posted By: Astro14
IIRC, 1 lb at the wheel is like 10 or more in the mass of the vehicle.
I see this mentioned on various forums, but I have never been able to find math/physics explanation to support this claim. Does anyone have a link?
I don't know where all those crazy numbers come from.
In the case of a wheel, the equivalent mass of a rotating solid disc is 1.5 times its weight. For a thin ring, it's 2.0 times its mass. Those are the two extremes, so it has to be somewhere between that. I originally calculated these values myself but since then I've also seen them published in one of my mechanical engineering textbooks.
I did a quick search and this page seems to have good info:
http://hpwizard.com/rotational-inertia.html
Originally Posted By: HPWizard
Shaving a pound from your tires is equivalent to shaving at most 2 pounds of non-rotating weight. That's PER TIRE, so a pound off each tire could worth close to 8 pounds of weight reduction. For wheels, the multiplier is closer to 1.6, so saving 5 pounds per wheel (20 total) would feel like a static weight reduction of 32 pounds. For brake discs, it can be as low as 1.2.
In the case of this Tahoe, the equivalent mass of the extra 80 lb of wheels is between 120 to 160 lb. For a 5500 lb vehicle, this affects acceleration and braking by about 2.5% and, all else being equal, the extra mass itself increases rolling resistance by about 1.5%. So I'd guess that the total effect of the wheel mass on fuel economy is well under 2%. The wider tire could add a little bit of aerodynamic drag too, but it's almost nothing compared to the drag area of the vehicle and they're not a whole lot wider than those on the smaller rim sizes. The model of tire and level of wear would probably have a bigger impact on fuel economy than anything. If you notice any difference from switching, I'd attribute it primarily to that.
Great info, thanks for putting some real numbers and equations to come up with this. Most everything else is just attributed to opinions or an educated guess.
Well, at this point I'm just waiting for the weekend so I can swap tires and see if all this adds up. I'll be sure to post the results.