one thing that is not customised as such is tyres,
they are black, occasionally with white side walls, but what if you could have illuminated tyres, above a woman adjusts her stocking using the light emitted by the Goodyear tyre on an October night in 1961, photograph Getty images, in the
early 1960s, Goodyear employees William Larson and Anthony Finelli worked
together to create the world’s first neothane automobile tires, neothane was
just a fancier name for urethane, the chemical compound invented three decades
earlier by German chemist Otto Bayer. Unlike traditional tires, which required
multiple layers of rubber as well as fabric and a laborious process to
manufacture, neothane tires were grippy, squishy, responsive and easy to make.
But the advantages didn’t end there, neothane tires were also translucent,
could be dyed in various colours, and, as Goodyear demonstrated, they could even
be fitted with lights for a unique visual effect,
apart from
the cost of producing and maintaining illuminating car tires, which was
prohibitive, the practicality of the tire was questionable. After only a few
miles, the wear and tear and the dirt on the roads would cover the tires in
soot, and rendering the glow pretty much useless, but above
all, the problem was safety, neothane tires just didn’t do very well in rainy
conditions and when driving at high speeds, as they didn’t hold up to hard
braking due to the relatively low 250-degree pouring temperature of the
compound. So after 10 years in development, Goodyear decided to scrap the
project without ever bringing the tyres to market,
but they did feature on the Golden Sahara II as can be seen in this video, I wonder if a coloured tyre could be made today would the public buy them?
No comments:
Post a Comment