Tire Manufacturing Process
Building
the highest quality tires requires the best of men, materials and
machines – all of which are found in the Specialty Tires of America
manufacturing process.
The first step
in our process begins with the weighing and measuring of the raw
materials which go into Banbury mixers. Following a formula which has
been developed, tested and perfected in our laboratory and on test
vehicles, the compounder prepares the ingredients for mixing. The
composition of a tire tread stock, for example, is rubber (natural and
synthetic), carbon black (to give strength and abrasion resistance),
sulphur (which causes vulcanization), accelerator (to speed up
vulcanization), age resistors (to minimize the effect of sunlight water
and air), zinc oxide and stearic acid (to help activate the
accelerators and aid in processing) and oils (to aid processing).
Mixed
rubber must be given further mixing and kneading. This is accomplished
on the mill where the batch is rolled into sheets and worked until it
is the proper consistency for the next operation. A sample is taken and
tested by the laboratory. Depending on the intended use of the stock,
it may be sent either to the tuber, bead former or calendar for further
processing into treads, beads, ply coats and sidewalls.
If
the stock is destined for tire treads, sidewall or bead filler, it is
taken by means of conveyor to the extruder, or tuber, where warmed
stock is fed into the barrel and forced by screw out through a die. The
die has been carefully made to obtain the shape and thickness desired
by the tire designers. From the tuber, the treads are sent to the
skiver where they are cut to exact lengths for use in tire building.
If
the stock is to be used in the carcass of the tire, it is sent to the
calender. Tire cord fabrics, cushion stock, and the inner-liner stock
are all prepared at the calender. Nylon, polyester, Fiberglass, steel,
KevlarŪ, and rayon cord is purchased already coated with an adhesive to
give a better bond between the rubber and the cord.
The
adhesive treated fabric then goes through another process called
calendaring. In this process rubber is squeezed around the cords to
insulate them from each other and make heat-resistant tire plies. The
rubberized fabric is cut mechanically on a bias cutter into the proper
angle and sized ply strips. In the tire building operation, these are
placed at alternating angles, or biased angles, to give the tire body
maximum strength. The angle chosen by the tire engineers is aimed to
meet the requirements of comfort, inflation, load and dynamic stresses.
Another component that must be
assembled is the bead wire bundle which holds the tire to the rim. The
bead wire is bronze plated to resist corrosion and to promote good
adhesion of the rubber. It is then coated with a rubber compound and
bent around the circumference of a wheel to give the bead a circular
shape. Finally, lengths of woven nylon are wrapped around the bead
bundle to make it ready for use in the tire building operation.
Tire
building begins on a revolving drum. The operator is a highly skilled
craftsman who takes the previously calendared cut fabric (called a ply)
and wraps it around the drum. After the appropriate number of plies
have been applied to the revolving drum, a bead bundle is placed on
each edge. The fabric is crimped over its edges. These plies are then
turned up over the bead bundle, thus enclosing it. Additional plies may
then be put on the drum and turned down over the bead-ply bundle.
When
the correct number of plies have been assembled on the drum, the thick,
tough, wear-resisting tread rubber is placed on top of the plies. White
sidewall or white-lettered tires require that a strip of white rubber
is placed on the sidewall then covered with a thin layer of black
rubber. The “green” (uncured) tire is removed by collapsing the drum
and then conveyed to a vulcanizing mold.
The
“green” tire is transformed into a final product during the curing
(vulcanization) process. This process begins with the green tire being
placed into a press which contains the mold for the tire. When the
press closes the green tire is pressed into the mold forming the
sidewall and tread design. Heat and pressure are applied to the tire
for the prescribed “cure” time to yield a resilient and durable
finished tire. Each finished tire is carefully inspected at this point.
Finished tires are subject to additional selected tests and inspections
including: inflated dimensions, balance, x-ray, section analysis and
wheel testing. Only after these checks are satisfactorily completed are
the tires released to become worthy of the Specialty Tires of America
name.

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