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Michelin's Airless Passenger Car Tires Get Their First Public Outing (newatlas.com) 159

New Atlas reports the latest development with Michelin's airless tire technology, which has been in the works for almost two decades. An anonymous Slashdot reader shares an excerpt from the report: The advantages are pretty clear: firstly, you can never be brought to a stop by a puncture or blowout -- Michelin says about 200 million tires every year hit scrapyards early thanks to these. Secondly, you don't have to look after your tire pressures; that doesn't just save you time, it also eliminates all early wear caused by underinflation. Their internal spokes are hugely tunable to meet desired performance characteristics. You can individually tune their stiffness under acceleration, braking, cornering and bump handling forces. The bump handling characteristics can even be tuned to eliminate the need for separate suspension in some types of vehicles. You can poke holes right through the tread to let water escape, potentially creating much better resistance to aquaplaning. They take less raw material and less energy to make, making them better for the environment, and Michelin has estimated they'll last up to three times as long as a regular ol' hoop.

They have obviously not been easy to commercialize, though; 16 years and counting is a long and difficult birth for a product people are clearly interested in. The Tweel, which replaces the entire wheel assembly, has been available for some time for various off-road vehicles, but it's still yet to make it to the road. Michelin has teamed up with GM to design and start selling an airless tire for street use on passenger cars. Called Uptis, this product is a full-wheel solution requiring specialized rims. Michelin says it will withstand much greater impacts than a regular tire and wheel, and will have a "dramatically" longer lifespan, while adding no extra rolling resistance, not feeling any different to the driver and adding only around seven percent to the weight of the wheel -- less than existing run-flat tires do. GM will begin offering Uptis as an option on certain models "as early as 2024," and the partnership is working with US state governments on regulatory approvals for street use, as well as with the federal government.

At IAA Munich recently, the Uptis airless tire got its first public outing, in which "certain lucky members of the public" had a chance to ride in a Mini Electric kitted out with a set. By all reports, the experience was about as exciting as driving on a regular set of tires -- i.e. not very interesting at all. They felt no different. But that's kind of the point here, Michelin is hoping to bring in a new and improved technology with zero change in the user experience. Hence this awkward interview with "Automotive lifestyle YouTuber Mr JWW" (James Walker).

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Michelin's Airless Passenger Car Tires Get Their First Public Outing

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  • by eagle486 ( 553102 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @05:31PM (#61796939)

    Looks neat, but how will it work if mud or snow/ice get inside of the tire?

    • self driving cars are for sunny areas only you fool

    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      Similar to how in cold climates you just drive your pneumatic tires until they warm up to the point they no longer feel like square tires you would just drive them until they clean themselves out. 8^)
      It could be interesting to be next to a car with one of these tires when the ice finally does clear though. 8^0

      P.S. I assume that these tires probably need the same warming period before they regain full flexibility.

    • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

      Looks neat, but how will it work if mud or snow/ice get inside of the tire?

      The eventual real production model will likely have a sidewall to protect against ice or pebbles.

      • by quenda ( 644621 )

        The eventual real production model will likely have a sidewall to protect against ice or pebbles.

        You can plainly see in the photo in TFA that the prototypes already have sidewalls.

        • You can plainly see in the photo in TFA that the prototypes already have sidewalls.

          No they don't. Are we looking at the same picture, the one of the white Mini?

          • by quenda ( 644621 )

            No they don't. Are we looking at the same picture, the one of the white Mini?

            Almost. I was looking at the low-res version. Mea culpa .

        • by DrXym ( 126579 )
          They look completely open to me. It's easy to see how rock or compacted crap could get pinched into the spokes. I would hope that as it spins it would throw it back out, but you never know. It might also require there to be specialised versions of the tyre for the left and right side so they spin in the proper direction to do this.
      • The eventual real production model will likely have a sidewall to protect against ice or pebbles.

        But the hipsters would not be able to show they have airless tyres. Hipsters like everything that has a "less" or "free" suffix, like "meat-free food " and "odourless paint" - because everything is bad in some way.

    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      If they got absolutely packed with dirt or rocks, I imagine it would be an issue, but I don't think snow or mud would be much of a problem between the spokes.

      • Having some mud in one side of the tire would mess up the balance. When driving down the highway things would start to shake. So no different then getting mud packed within the rim of a current tire. Once things start to shack you just have to take a hose to the tire.
        • by tragedy ( 27079 )

          Balance is only really important when travelling at speed. If you're slogging through mud, it's not going to be at highway speed. At higher speeds, mud will be flung right out of the wheel. If it manages to set in there, then it will be a problem though. As you point out, not really different from current tires/wheels.

          If they are developing more advanced wheels though, another advanced feature that would be nice is if they were self-balancing.

    • The contents crumble and disperse.

    • That stuff is NOT a problem. The problem is rocks or other large, uncompressible debris. That can break spokes. A percentage of broken spokes is allowable but if they're all in the same place, or all in a line or whatever, it's going to affect driveability. This is a basically unsolvable problem which is nonetheless not going to be a big problem for road-going vehicles, or even on dirt roads in general, only for actual off-roading where rubber tires are going to continue to reign for the foreseeable future.

  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @05:49PM (#61796975)

    A regular tire can be deflated to about 2 lbs which gives you a much greater contact patch to get out of sand.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @06:08PM (#61797007)

    I might see if these are around the next time I need tires, I used to use run-flats and I liked them a lot for winter use. A while ago I ran over a beer bottle someone had left along the curb where I parked, it got covered by snow and when I tried to drive off it popped the tire meaning I had to put on a spare in a driving snowstorm.

    Run-flats meant I could probably make it somewhere safe to change a tire, the same would be even more true for this new tire - and as the summary notes it's a lot lighter than run-flats, the only downside of them apart from the expense.

    • They do say it might appear "as early as 2024". Given these have already been in development for so long, you might end up first using these sorts of tires on your next fusion-powered car.

  • I'm interested (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fabioalcor ( 1663783 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @06:17PM (#61797025)

    But please, close the f'ing thing, besides ugly, all kind of dirt, mud and stuff will get inside the tire, even insects and vermin would find a home there. Thanks.

    • Centrifugal force will probably take care of that.

      • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

        Yes (mostly) and that's a big problem: a lot more stuff can get stuck in all those nooks and crevices, and the holes if they end up making them for reduced aquaplaning. Lots of projectiles will ensue. They should have co-invented it with unbreakable windshields, and body parts and paints that don't dent.

        Due to its geometry, the projectiles will not be limited to the first mile or so of higher speed travel, they may remain stuck for long periods to then dislodge any time

    • That was my first thought, our trucks at work have mud and crap caked on the inside of the rims. An open tire would get a rock stuck in it, making a hard spot that would wear though quickly.
  • TPMS mandate (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @06:20PM (#61797029)

    I'm in if this means the end of TPMS and spike strips.

    Or if it hastens the arrival of EVs with hub motors.

    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      Would be nice. The problem with that is more fundamental, as in-wheel motors add a lot of mass, and specifically, unsprung mass. This wheel is already tens of percents heavier than a traditional wheel with rim. That causes a ton of additional wear on the suspension, tire, brakes, steering and the in-wheel motor itself; poses additional constraints for wheel suspension geometry; alters the ride characteristics including safety and comfort.

      As neat as this concept is, the current EV goal is, retaining safety a

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @06:38PM (#61797085) Homepage

    They claim the airless tires take less raw materials to make and last longer than regular tires.

    Anyone know why? That seems counter-intuitive to me. I can see lasting longer, but I do not understand how they can take less raw material than what is basically a balloon.

    • Also says they add 7 percent to the weight of the wheel, which is a pretty good trick when you're using less material. It does say that's less than run-flats add, so maybe less material than runflats?
      • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @08:25PM (#61797299) Homepage Journal

        Tread life *in practice* may be longer because people won't be driving around on improperly inflated tires.

        • Tread life *in practice* may be longer because people won't be driving around on improperly inflated tires.

          Putting aside the fact that I inflate my tyres properly, the advice with pneumatic tyres is to increase the pressure if you are carrying heavier loads. For example if you have overweight parents-in-law regularly in the back seat. Can't be done with airless tyres so they would wear faster.

          Of course, not everyone has overweight parents-in-law regularly in the back seat, but not everyone neglects their tyre pressures either. I worked as a garage mechanic for a time and never particularly noticed tyre wear

      • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @08:46PM (#61797337)

        The claim is not that the finished product contains less material, but that the entire manufacturing process consumes less material.

    • I doubt it's about "less materials" as it is "cheaper materials". An all-plastic wheel made from a single mold will cost less to make than a tire impregnated with lots of crossing steel cords. That's why the tire weighs more, BTW. Plastic is lighter than steel, but not for a structure of equivalent strength. There is certainly more material in the airless tire overall, to compensate for the lack of steel reinforcement (same reason why plastic radiators and intake manifolds are actually heavier than thei

  • If run flat tires of any indication, these will be more expensive, harsher ride and won't last as long as conventional tire. Already Michelin has conventional tires that expect to last 50K. What more do you want/need?
  • by thomn8r ( 635504 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @07:09PM (#61797163)
    The tire and rim are one unit, which is going to make them expensive as hell, so they're going to end up like current run-flat technology: they'll be original-equipment on high-end vehicles, and then people will revert to conventional tires at the earliest opportunity. And with the rim and tire as a single unit, you don't get much in the way of style choices.
  • WTF? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @07:44PM (#61797237)

    Secondly, you don't have to look after your tire pressures; that doesn't just save you time,

    Apparently I am the only person on the entire planet who can take two minutes of a single day once a month to check their tire pressure. Even better, if you go to a place which has free air (and there some around), you can set the pump to whatever pressure you want and let it do the work in the same amount of time.

    Considering what these things will cost, I'll take the two minutes once a month.

    • Many people consider it part of car servicing. The mechanics on the other hand say that is news to them.
      I check the pressure monthly but I don't count. Car nut.

    • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

      Around my place air is not free (you have to buy special coins from the busy desk) and the filling stations are so small that you block a pump to do your thing, but the pump is in use.... Needless to say that it takes more than 2 minutes to do that.

      I miss my time in CA where air was free in every filling station, and since all filling station had one air pump, they would be free 99% of the time.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      All modern cars have wireless tyre pressure monitoring, so there isn't any need to manually check. Apparently people were too lazy to do it once a month, in answer to your question, so the automatic system had to be mandated by law.

      Same with detecting faulty lights, modern vehicles by law have to warn the driver.

      Which raises the question, if your car is expecting wireless tire pressure sensors and throws up errors when they aren't found, does that mean you will need a little box to send fake sensor data if

    • Apparently I am the only person on the entire planet who can take two minutes of a single day once a month to check their tire pressure.

      Yeah most likely. Curiously are you the only person who gets up from the couch to change the TV channel too, or did you embrace the amazing technology of the remote control to save you time?

      Just because you do something doesn't mean there isn't a benefit in automating it away, especially for something as easily skipped as a tire pressure check.

  • Tire pressure is an important part of setting up a car. How will you regulate tire temperatures now?

    • If they sponsor your class you'll drive these tires and like it. It's only an important part of tuning if you can tune it, you will adapt if you can't.

    • Racers need not buy tweels and already buy racing tires. Tweel need not be a universal solution. There are no universal pneumatic tires either. If raced there will be appropriate compounds available as with pneumatics.

  • Let's have it! Come on! Stop avoiding the question.

    • If you have to ask...

      The important claim is not in the cost. The important claim is that they will last longer than conventional tires. This category of tire already exists, but they don't last long and can't be used at freeway speeds. That's been the challenge.

      I drive a 21 year old vehicle, and I'd happily pay double or even triple what I pay for tires now if these are all the things they claim, and if they make a good enough all-weather version. And right now I'm using Michelin Defender, which is one of t

      • Whatever the claim says, a main consideration is cost per mile. It is no good lasting twice as long if they cost three times as much, and I see no reason why they should last longer than pneumatic tyres anyway.

        Someone said about premature wear of pnuematics because of wrong pressures, but if you care about costs then simply check your pressures. FWIW, I check mine about once a month and they never change.
        • Whatever the claim says, a main consideration is cost per mile. It is no good lasting twice as long if they cost three times as much, and I see no reason why they should last longer than pneumatic tyres anyway.

          Absolutely false, if it lasts twice as long and costs three times as much, a lot of people will be interested.

          The driving performance of the tire changes as the tire ages. If that curve is the same, but the lifespan doubles, that delivers a more pleasant driving experience the whole time, because there will be less perceived change.

          Also, for people who overspend and don't live within their means, the increased cost is a no-go. For people with a median income who live within their means, the absolute cost of

  • Excellent! Pretty soon we can stop worrying about all those stop spikes the cops keep throwing across the road.
  • Sounds like a problem for stop sticks. Seems this could make police vehicle pursuit chases longer. I wonder what new devices they might want for the police. The chain-link mega-clothesliner? The tire incinerator, sprays napalm? Cutting down on tire waste and flats a plus, though.
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Remote engine killswitch in all new cars. Already exists in quite a few models that are leased.

  • by willy_me ( 212994 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @09:16PM (#61797409)
    Low profile tires offer great performance when turning. Turning feels responsive because the tires flex less in the horizontal. These tires look interesting because they should offer even better horizontal stability without having to be low profile. Now we might be able to have a smoother ride while still feeling responsive in the corners. Well, in theory.
  • Cool, it's the smart wheels from Snow Crash.
    • Cool, it's the smart wheels from Snow Crash.

      IIRC the smartwheel spokes ended in rubber pads, that's a point of similarity. And they rotate around a hub, that's two points. But that's it. They literally could not be any more different and still be called wheels.

  • by Nikademus ( 631739 ) * <renaud.allard@it> on Wednesday September 15, 2021 @02:26AM (#61797791) Homepage

    I think the biggest disadvantage is that it's a full wheel and not just a tire, so you can't just replace your old tire with this one. Also, I am wondering about the homolgation of this kind of thing in many countries, as, again, this is a full wheel.

    • I suspect there might be a wheel/core credit in the works? Maybe "retreads" will be 30% off? Michelin folks are no dummies. Personally, to me, this is a fantastic idea. Flats, tire pressure, both issues for over 100 years, needs a solution, like electric replacing of dino powered cars.
  • Using compressed air as a spring is a nice concept, and very simple when you get it working. This airless tire looks rather complicated. I imagine it could be useful for a road trip on the Moon, where air is in short supply.

    • Pneumatic tires have some advantages if you need to change the size of your contact patch, or if you plan to drive through loose rocky soil. For literally every other situation, tweels are superior and are frankly no more complicated. You're looking at the spokes which seem complicated, but are actually very simple to produce and are actually less complicated than sidewalls. And the tread section can be less complicated than it is now if it's held up by the spokes and deformable rim.

      Moon buggies actually us

  • by Maury Markowitz ( 452832 ) on Wednesday September 15, 2021 @07:43AM (#61798079) Homepage

    I was surprised to see the sides of these tires are completely open. This would seem to allow snow and water into the interior "springs", which would then freeze overnight while the car sits and, I assume, basically ruin the shock absorbing potential of the design. Mud and dirt would also be a problem, but I suspect less of one as I would expect it to be flung out during driving - although I guess frozen mud might be an issue.

    I can't see anything about snow driving, so are these summer-only designs?

    • I was surprised to see the sides of these tires are completely open.

      How would you close them in? You'd need something like a sidewall, which could deform with the wheel. And then at that point, you might as well fill it up with air and drive on it.

  • questions (Score:5, Interesting)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Wednesday September 15, 2021 @07:48AM (#61798083) Journal

    So...price?
    If it takes "less resources to make" that equals cheaper, right? (He said, knowing what the answer would be...)

    Second, I'm curious about open-structure tires like that in my local conditions in Minnesota. Summer, great. Deep winter, probably fine. The 4 months of the year where we see nice days but those vast puddles of slush freeze solid each night...? I'm really curious if you park this in 2" deep puddle, and then try to drive away the next morning, what does ice in those interstices do to the function/life of the tire?

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday September 15, 2021 @08:59AM (#61798231)
    While they sound useful, the proof will be when we see how much they cost, which cars are suitable for them and whether they suffer any other problems. e.g. if the open sides to those wheels can be clogged with debris, stones, ice or snow and break the tyre.
  • by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Wednesday September 15, 2021 @11:20AM (#61798619)

    Right now, tires are unbelievably expensive in the US. Expect to pay like $400 for a set of sedan tires. Tires are made from petroleum, so you can expect that ending fossil fuels means ending tires. It will be necessary to go to more sustainable renewable materials, such as wood.

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