by RichD » Thu Apr 05, 2018 8:28 am
Some of the older silicone tires like the AJ's from the '60's and the Indy Grips from about ten years ago used a different type of silicone from what is used by the major makers today. The older type is far more fragile, but I am not certain that the actual grip degrades with time. The tires are more likely to get chunked, torn or just worn out before that might happen. The newer type of silicone is far more durable, I have cars with those that are 10 years old that I race on a regular basis and the grip is still great.
Silicone tires are fussy about running on a dusty track. Dust sticks to silicone tires, if you put a car with clean tires on a track that is even slightly dusty you will get a few fast laps, but once the tires get coated with dust your grip will be greatly reduced. You can wash the tires to remove the dust, it is not necessary to use a solvent, water with a little dish washing liquid or surface cleaner in it works well. The quick way to clean the tires is to roll them over sticky tape. Since the tires pick up dust a number of cycles of running the car and cleaning the tires will eventually clean the track surface, at least where the tires roll. Wiping or vacuuming the track before you run your cars is helpful, but it will not remove 100% of the dust.
There are no RTR slot cars that I am aware of that come with silicone tires installed, they are all some sort of rubber. For a short time Slot.it cars came with a pair of S2 silicone tires as spares.
Rubber tire often harden with age and sanding them can help to restore grip, as can treating them with 3in1 oil or NSR tire conditioner. I do not know of any chemical treatment that improves the grip of silicone tires beyond simple cleaning.
The tires on all of my cars have been glued to the wheels and trued using a machine. Just running the tires on sand paper will not make them perfectly true.
I do not recommend using MEK on silicone tires, I have done some silicone chemistry in the lab. MEK is a solvent for silicone, if you soak your tires in it they may be damaged.
Last edited by
RichD on Thu Apr 05, 2018 1:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.