Aquaplaning

 

Aquaplaning is loss of road holding (traction and steering capabilities) caused by tires skimming over the surface of a wet track.

AquaplaningIt occurs when a tire's tread pattern is unable to disperse sufficient water from the road surface. Levels of traction (and therefore control) decrease as the size of the contact patch decreases. Aquaplaning causes the tire(s) to lose contact with the road, making the vehicle uncontrollable.
Aquaplaning is the effect of a loss of steering control and traction caused by a film of water building between the tire and road surface.

 

Most drivers will, at some stage, experience this effect to varying degrees. As the tire travels in a forward direction it relies mainly on the tread pattern to "evacuate" water from the road surface to enable a contact with the tires tread pattern. Several factors can affect the resistance of a tire to aquaplaning such as vehicle speed, depth of water, tire pressures and, most importantly, the tread depth of the tires.


In wet weather, the racing tires that have been properly designed and are in good running condition can cut through the water and maintain contact with the road at high speeds. In cases where the wet racing tires are excessively worn (bald tires) or underinflated, or the water is very deep, you may still aquaplane at slower speeds.

 

Experiment with different driving speed

Water depth: 5mm, new tires
Diving speed 20 km/h 60 km/h 80 km/h 100 km/h
Ground contact surface photo Aquaplaning experiment speed
 
Tire fully in contact with ground
Tire almost fully in contact with ground
Tire is partialy floating up
Almost all tire is floating on water layer

 

 

Experiment with different groove depth

Speed: 80 km/h, Water depth: 5mm
Tire Groove deepth New - 7.5 mm 3,2 mm 1.6 mm
Ground contact surface photo Experiment with different groove depth
 
Tire is partialy floating up
Much of the tire is floating up
Almost all tire is floating on water layer

 

At higher speeds, the wedge of water in front of the tires may pass under the tires and the tires will ride on a cushion of water resulting in possible complete loss of traction.

aquaplaning, 3 zones

A) Sinkage zone: water forms a wedge that lifts the tread - no contact
B) Transition zone - partial contact
C) Contact zone - the tread is in contact with the ground

 

In the F1 Racing, there is a specific tire used for a very wet track during heavy rain, intermediate tires for wet track or light rain, compared to a dry one with no groves.
Rain tires are very heavily grooved and the angle of these grooves is set to give the best water evacuation and the best wet performance possible at very high speeds.

 

Tires Bridgestone Potenza
Bridgestone Potenza slick tires for dry track
Bridgestone Potenza Intrmediate tires for light rain
Bridgestone Potenza full wet tires

 

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Some useful links:

- f1technical.net, , a great site with a lot of technical information’s and explanations. Site is updated daily with news from F1 word.

 - autosport.com, This site is a legend. A bible for racing lovers. News from all around the word. Unfortunately, to get access to all news, interviews and to open the site completely you should be subscribed to Autosport magazine. Anyway, great read.

 - f1network.net, Good read. Fan’s from every team can find his team forum. For me, like Ferrari fan, forum is the best Ferrari forum, very visited, with great threads.

 - Ferrarif1forum.com is another great Ferrari site for Ferrari fan’s like me. Site is relatively new, but great fun, with great discussion, news and Ferrari F1 car Development topic. Twitter and Facebook are also there.

 - f1.gpupdate.net, Site with fresh news from Formula 1

 - planetf1, another site with many different articles, news and statistics. Biased toward British teams, but anyway good read.

 - gurneyflap.com, Great history site. You can learn a lot from this site. Pictures, cars and many many more. Great.

 - fia.com, La Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, representing the interests of motoring organisations and motor car users. Head organisation and ruler in auto sport.

 - wikipedia.org, I don’t believe that I have to tell you anything about this site. It’s not about Formula 1 technology, but you can learn a lot about that too.

 - suttonimages.com. source of great images from autosport

 - carbibles.com, a great site for normal car users. Here you can find explanations of almost everything about your car and how it works. Technical reviews and explanations of some in-car gadgets.