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rabbi
03-18-2005, 10:06 AM
I see Jeff Gordon is pushing DuPont`s detailing products and ArmorAll is now selling a 2 stage paint cleaning process.

Bill D
03-18-2005, 10:39 AM
Hmm...Michelin couldn`t get him to push their tire and wheel cleaner and brake dust repellent :dunno

JaredPointer
03-18-2005, 11:00 AM
They got the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man pushing their products don`t they??? :lol

MS22
03-18-2005, 12:39 PM
I`ll be sticking with the high quality, proven non mass-market products that our sponsors carry. Unless Michelin/Dupont/Armor All are going to pay me half a million dollars annually, then I would promote their products without hesitation.

Jngrbrdman
03-18-2005, 02:44 PM
I wonder if they will be coming out with products to care for the new `Tweel` design?

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt2.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt3.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt4.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt5.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt6.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt7.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v290/francois-xavier_c/scans/mt8.jpg

From the Michelin website:



DETROIT, M.I. (January 9, 2005) – Today at the North American International Auto Show (NAIAS) Michelin showcased a potential future for mobility, an integrated tire and wheel combination missing one ingredient that is vital for traditional tire performance...air. The company unveiled the first real-world fitments for its revolutionary "Tweel" – which operates entirely without air. View the photo gallery.



"Major revolutions in mobility may come along only once in a hundred years," said Terry Gettys, president of Michelin Americas Research and Development Center in Greenville, S.C. "But a new century has dawned and Tweel has proven its potential to transform mobility. Tweel enables us to reach levels of performance that quite simply aren`t possible with today`s conventional pneumatic technology."



Michelin`s Tweel is in production and available as an enhancement for future iBOT™ mobility systems. Invented by Dean Kamen, the iBOT™ mobility device has the ability to climb stairs and navigate uneven terrain, offering mobility freedom impossible with traditional wheelchairs. Additionally, Segway LLC`s Concept Centaur, a prototype that applies self-balancing technology to a four-wheel device, has also been equipped with Tweel to increase its performance potential.



Beyond these first real-world applications, Michelin has additional projects for Tweel on construction skidsteers and a variety of military vehicles. The most intriguing application may be Michelin`s early prototype Tweel fitment for passenger cars. The mobility company released video of promising Tweel performance on an Audi A4.



"The Tweel automotive application, as demonstrated on the Audi, is definitely a concept, a stretch application with strong future potential," said Gettys. "Our concentration is to enter the market with lower-speed, lower-weight Tweel applications. What we learn from our early successes will be applied to Tweel fitments for passenger cars and beyond."



Benefits of Tweel™:

The heart of Tweel innovation is its deceptively simple looking hub and spoke design that replaces the need for air pressure while delivering performance previously only available from pneumatic tires. The flexible spokes are fused with a flexible wheel that deforms to absorb shock and rebound with unimaginable ease. Without the air needed by conventional tires, Tweel still delivers pneumatic-like performance in weight-carrying capacity, ride comfort, and the ability to "envelope" road hazards.



Michelin has also found that it can tune Tweel performances independently of each other, which is a significant change from conventional tires. This means that vertical stiffness (which primarily affects ride comfort) and lateral stiffness (which affects handling and cornering) can both be optimized, pushing the performance envelope in these applications and enabling new performances not possible for current inflated tires. The Tweel prototype, demonstrated on the Audi A4, is within five percent of the rolling resistance and mass levels of current pneumatic tires. That translates to within one percent of the fuel economy of the OE fitment. Additionally, Michelin has increased the lateral stiffness by a factor of five, making the prototype unusually responsive in its handling.



Future of Tweel™ Technology:

For Michelin, Tweel is a long-term vision that represents the next step in a long path of industry-changing innovations. Fifty years ago, Michelin invented the radial tire and there is no question that radial tire technology will continue as the standard for a long time to come. Michelin continues to advance the performance of the radial tire in areas such as rolling resistance, wear life and grip. In the short-term, the lessons learned from Tweel research are being applied to improve those conventional tire performances. In the future, Tweel may reinvent the way that vehicles move. Checking tire pressure, fixing flats, highway blow-outs and balancing between traction and comfort could all fade into memory.

MS22
03-18-2005, 03:01 PM
That is crazy. Hard to imagine that those Tweels can handle high speed cornering when there is no side wall there to increase the structural rigidity. Hopefully they keep making regular wheels and tires in the future; I`ll just keep avioding potholes and curbs.