Rubber Journal Asia Tyre Industry
Tyre designs accelerate the industry’s market potentials From pneumatic tyres to self-healing and
One of the first pneumatic tyres
concept tyres, innovations in tyre designs keep the industry on track for growth, says Angelica Buan in this report.
Growth for the tyre sector obility is no longer a millennial buzzword but a reality in economies where urbanisation is rapidly increasing. Upward trajectory of automotive sales continue amid economic slowdown in mature markets like China, the US and Europe. This uptrend influences the market performance of the global tyre industry, which is expected to hit the value of nearly US$250 billion by 2019, says management consulting firm Lucintel in its market report. It attributes the growth to high demand for green tyres and tyre radialisation as well as increasing sales of commercial and passenger vehicles. It also mentions that technological innovations and increasing factory automation will be factoring in the uptick of the global automotive tyre industry in the coming years, adding that emerging economies, especially in Asia, such as India, Thailand, and Vietnam, will be leading the demand for tyres. By 2020, global market potential for tyres would jack up to 2.5 billion units, according to a 2014 global tyres market report by Global Industry Analysts (GIA), and it will be driven by rising automobile production in developing markets and expansion of commercial vehicle fleets, it says. It finds that the Asia Pacific region has exhibited the fastest growth at 6.4% CAGR from the 2014-2018 projection period. Regulatory constraints, one of the major influences in tyre sales and demand, favours high technology products, which gives the edge to major tyre manufacturers like Goodyear, Bridgestone, Continental and Pirelli, to name a few, says GIA.
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It wasn’t until 1888 that John Boyd Dunlop reinvented the pneumatic tyre whilst trying to improve his son’s bicycle. Dunlop’s tyre, like Thomson’s, wasn’t popular until a race in Belfast, Ireland, was won by a rider using his tyres. With that victory, people began to take notice of the pneumatic tyre. Dunlop’s development of the pneumatic tyre arrived at a crucial time in the development of road transportation. Commercial production began in 1890 in Belfast. Dunlop partnered with William Du Cros to form a company that would later become the Dunlop Rubber Company. In 1895, the pneumatic tyre was first used on automobiles, by Andre and Edouard Michelin. It was also around this time that legislation was put into effect that discouraged the use of solid rubber tyres. Thus, companies sprang up to meet the new demand for the new tyres and the age of the pneumatic tyre was started. Tyres remained fundamentally unchanged throughout the 1920s and 1930s until French tyre maker Michelin introduced steel-belted radial tyres in 1948. This new type of pneumatic tyre meant that they would have a longer life thanks to ply cords that radiate from a 90 degree angle from the wheel rim. It also meant that the tyre had less rolling resistance – increasing the mileage of a vehicle. One drawback was that these tyres required a different suspension system on the vehicle.
The advent of pneumatic tyres t all started in 1845 when the pneumatic or air-filled tyre, which works by air within the tyre absorbing the shocks of the road, was invented and patented by RW Thomson. Scottish Thomson’s design used a number of thin inflated tubes inside a leather cover. This meant that it would take more than one puncture before the tyre deflated. However, despite this new breakthrough in tyres, the old solid rubber variety was still favoured by the public, leaving the pneumatic tyre out in the wilderness.
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Tyres can now heal themselves ubber tyres that are filled with air are light and durable, but come with a significant weakness: punctures when hit by sharp things. Punctured tyres become flat tyres, and then that’s a one way ticket to the recycling heap.
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