I would love CF wheels, but maybe I'm not casual. I like to chase weight reduction and apart of the reason I haven't gotten is I haven't found any that aesthetically pleasing or at a decent price. I will echo whatever offset allows for clearance for all BBK would be best.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
BBS RC/ APEX ARC8 style CF wheels
Collapse
X
-
That would be very interesting. Carbon can have a much higher tensile strength depending on how its laid up. If someone is smart enough to understand how the wheel is loaded I could definitely see carbon being superior in every way to aluminum except if the carbon/epoxy fails.
Just thinking through this...aluminum will bend then crack and then come apart. If the carbon/epoxy structure fails it will quickly just shatter into pieces and probably cause a lot of damage - rip up the wheel wheel liner, anything in the wheel well (wires, brake lines, trim) and could also damage the side and undercarriage as the shards are scattered. Could also puncture other tires. Carbon/epoxy is sharper than a razor blade...ask my fingers.
That failure point could be up to 8x higher...depending on how the carbon is oriented in the layup. Could be possible that you'd destroy the tire and suspension before the wheel is damaged.
Not sure if a visual inspection could detect damage or a defect? Also carbon doesn't fatigue like aluminum.
Just some things to consider. Interested in keeping tabs on progress.
Originally posted by Cronenberged View PostMeet in the middle et28
Comment
-
I am more interested if there would be some sort of warranty if the wheels fail during its first year or two. It turned out to be a nightmare for all of the Ford GT350R and GT500 owners with their carbon wheels. Looking at the Corvette forums, it looks like the new Z06 carbon wheels do not have any sort of warranty as well.2002 M3 Carbon Schwarz/Black 6MT
Comment
-
Originally posted by Bry5on View Post
Honestly this is the sort of thing that would tempt me to go over the edge.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
i'm for 18x9.5 (10 in ideal), et28.
but i'm not in, cause i doubt that its possible to make arc8 or ec7 (my love ) design with carbon fiber. and with some simple design, like te37, i would prefer my ec7rs.
cause for me in this case, cf wheel with some simple design would be like:
pros:
1) weight
cons:
1) design
2) chance of wheel lost (damage)
3) no choice of parameters.
Comment
-
I agree that simple spoke design would be more suitable and efficient for that purpose.
But at the same time as Slonik mentioned, I would rather have my current alloy setup that I like than to have have carbon wheels I don’t like.
From the beginning and simplicity standpoint , Our carbon wizzard insisted simple 5 spoke design like koeniggseg did, or something similar.
Therefore me personally I would sacrifice some efficiency and little bit of weight in favor of classic design which is proven to fit these cars.
Not sayin it needs to be necessarily ARC8. Technically, design like this is not a limiting factor. They already have retro woven style full CF wheels and they way exceed the alloy standards and excelled on crash tests.
Certification is clearly a part of this process with all the safety testing, official crash tests etc. it won’t be such a pain since they will be doing the same process at the same time with their wheel.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by RazorM View PostI agree that simple spoke design would be more suitable and efficient for that purpose.
But at the same time as Slonik mentioned, I would rather have my current alloy setup that I like than to have have carbon wheels I don't like.
From the beginning and simplicity standpoint , Our carbon wizzard insisted simple 5 spoke design like koeniggseg did, or something similar.
Therefore me personally I would sacrifice some efficiency and little bit of weight in favor of classic design which is proven to fit these cars.
Not sayin it needs to be necessarily ARC8. Technically, design like this is not a limiting factor. They already have retro woven style full CF wheels and they way exceed the alloy standards and excelled on crash tests.
Certification is clearly a part of this process with all the safety testing, official crash tests etc. it won't be such a pain since they will be doing the same process at the same time with their wheel.
Comment
Comment