High Speed Tire Certification
Willrx-
Tire age is certainly an important consideration on our car and this thread is very interesting regarding our tire options going forward now that Goodyear has effectively priced themselves out of the market. In the 2008 – 2010 timeframe many of us owners wanted to purchase new OE Goodyears but the only tires remaining for purchase were left over from the 2004 - 2006 production run. With the limited application of our tire sizes, Goodyear did not seem very motivated to produce newer mold date tires. Many owners opined the available stock tires (if they could find any) were getting quite “old” to be qualified as new tires with the 200+ mph characteristics we wanted (and Ford Certified) on our car. Many owners raised Goodyears awareness of producing another batch of F1 tires for the GT which they reluctantly did, but increased the per unit cost 100% so at least they could say the tires were still available, just at a ridiculous price. Enter the Bridgestones.
Not to hijack your thread, but I would like to interject some thoughts on the tire testing Ford did for our vehicle on which some have commented.
To be sure, Ford did a tremendous amount of high speed verification testing on our car. I believe much of this investigative research was conducted on static or moving plane wind tunnels, not necessarily on the track. Although there was high-speed track validation signoff testing done at Nardo, Italy. See below. And I am also sure Ford required of Goodyear to do extensive, let me repeat that, EXTENSIVE 200+ mph testing on their production supplied Formula F1 tires. Liability concerns alone for Ford dictated this safety issue had to be inspected from every possible failure scenario. Remember the Firestone Wilderness tire separation fiasco. This could not be repeated, especially on a halo vehicle.
Our Ford GT “Team History” book indicates Ford took two FGT vehicles over to Nardo, Italy in May 2004 for a week long test “to complete all the high speed sign-off requirements for handling, as well as powertrain, cooling and assorted other systems”. This is where Mr. McGowan clocked the Vmax speed of 211.89 mph. Understand that at Wide Open Throttle (WOT) our vehicle consumes a full load of 17.5 gallons of fuel in about 15 minutes, so this high speed testing was frequently punctuated by either running out of fuel (as one of Mark’s video’s shows) or frequent stops to refuel. Further, the history book states that, “By the time we were done, we had completed more than 500 miles of testing at over 200 mph with no real issues.”
Remember, Mark McGowan drove the Goodyears at 200+ mph for hours. (It would be interesting to know what they looked like after testing).
Based on the 500 mile statement that would mean about 2.5 hours (total) of 200+ mph car testing was achieved, at least at Nardo. So it was not really a whole lot of hours of actual production vehicle testing, but I believe a significant amount of component and model testing. Perhaps Mark (or other Team member) can chime in and let us know if any further 200+ mph track testing was done on our car.