Slot.it tyres (past and present)
A quick summary of everything I have pulled together regarding the tyres made by slot-it.
I'm sure there are different opinions out there and please feel free to respond so that mistakes can be rectified and other opinions on suitability can be reflected before I put this into a blog record.
(Aug 2017 AlanWilkinson)
Slot-it Part numbers represent a combination of DWG (sizing) and compound.
Sizing OuterDiameter x TyreWidth in millimetres.
The DWG in parenthesis below represents the tyre mold used to make the tyre and therefore this fixes the unfitted tyre size) .
The DWG does not represent the material used. I'll list that further below.
14.2 X 8 (1096)
14.6X 8.4 (1214)
16.1 X 8 (1088)
17.2 X 9.5 (1159)
17.8 X 9.5 (1228)
19.5 X 9.5 (1209*)
19.8 X 9.8 (1140)
16.5 X 10 (1067)
17 X 10 (1170)
17.8 X 10.5 (1167)
18 X 10 (1207)
18.5 X 10 (1045)
18.8 X 10 (1027)
19 X 10 (1042*)
19.5 X 10 (1171 & 1121)
20 X 10.5 (1120)
20.2 X 10.5 (1046*)
19 X 10.5 (1152)
19.9 X 10.5 (1046)
20 X 11.3 (1172)
19.8 X 12.2 (1028)
20.4 X 12.4 (1068 from "slot.it" and packaging) but the actual tyre shows a DWG of 1608 on the sidewall.
(* is a tyre for sale on some websites but not listed by "slot.it")
Sometimes the DWG number is incorporated into the part number, sometimes not.
Sizing inner diameter:
Typically manufacturers list their wheels by the largest diameter (the bead) which is not the same as the rim diameter (visible once the tyre is fitted)
Slot.it do not list inner diameters but the non "F1" tyres seem to fit wheels on 15mm (bead measurement) 13.5 mm (rim) without stretching.
15mm appears to be the smallest wheel these tyres will fit onto.
These tyres will easily stretch to fit a "non air hub" rim of 15.5mm but deform badly if fitted to an air hub of similar size, sinking into the air well and ruining the contact patch. The tyres can also be stretched further with gentle warming.
The F1 tyres have the same inner rim diameter (12mm) but are a lot less stretchable and will only fit hubs listed as "F1" type. They will fit "Formula1" hubs from slot-it, NSR and and All-Slot-Car.
Unfitted tyre Diameters taken from actual tyre digital calliper measurements:
1068/1608 has an inner rim diameter of 12mm
1170-E1 has an inner rim diameter of 12mm
1207-f22 has an inner rim diameter of 12mm
Compounds and durometer hardness.
All compounds are "rubber" unless stated, eg "S1" and "sponge".
Slot-IT does not make Urethane tyres.
The single letter refers to the compound used.
In some cases, The number is the durometer measurement, in others , lower number is harder, bigger numbers are softer. Both are a way to measure how hard the tyre is.
Slot it seem to have moved from the "1 to 4 " numbers to durometer readings, then back again but it's not possible to know why this would be.
"N22 and F22 are two very different compounds, expect more N22 to come soon in smaller formats" (Maurizio Ferrari 2012)
Compound, hardness and descriptions taken from various sources
- P1 hard for smooth plastic tracks - Discontinued ?
- P2 Medium for smooth plastic tracks - Discontinued ?
- P3 Soft, for use on smooth plastic track
- P4 Anti-wear for use on abrasive plastic track (Ninco)
- P5 ?
- P6 ?
- S1 (Silicone) smooth dust free track
- Z series tyres (Low Grip), for front wheels
- C1
- F15
- F22
- F35
- E1 "harder but grip very well on Ninco" (track) (MF 2012)
- N18
- N22 "A racing compound (N, 22 Shore hardness) which from our testing works extremely well at least on Ninco, wood, and that can be glued and trued equally as well" MF 2012)
"For the F and N series, the number is the shore hardness" (MF 2012)
We can deduce then, for others , the lower the number the harder the compound.
"All of the different tyres will fit on any of the hubs which Slot.it produce, with one exception - the F1 tyres (SIPT13/14/16) and F1 hubs (SIPA20ALB/ALG/ALS/MG) can only be used with each other" slot city.co.uk
When slot-it were asked which compound was best suited to which surface:
"It's very difficult to say, because there are so many track combinations out there, that I'd consider (it) inappropriate and misleading writing something like 'you will break your track record with this tyre' when we release a compound. Horses for courses.
And, on the other hand, I can't test the tyre on all existing surfaces.
N22 is a racing compound (N, 22 Shore A hardness) which from our testing works extremely well at least on Ninco, wood, and that can be glued and trued equally as well. Reports from other readers seem to confirm such statement"
- Maurizio Ferrari
Backup information:
From Wikipedia
Hardness may be defined as a material's resistance to indentation. The durometer scale was defined by Albert Ferdinand Shore, who developed a device to measure Shore hardness in the 1920s. The term durometer is often used to refer to the measurement as well as the instrument itself. Durometer is typically used as a measure of hardness in polymers, elastomers, and rubbers.[1]
And finally... Using this information.
Club newbie : "use what everyone else is using"
Mid pack wannabe : "anything here that might fit and work better than the club norm?"
Home track user (upgrading) : "measure your wheels , choose a DWG size then look at the compounds available that might be suitable for your track.
Shelf queen collectors : there is nothing useful for you here at all 😀
AlanW
A quick summary of everything I have pulled together regarding the tyres made by slot-it.
I'm sure there are different opinions out there and please feel free to respond so that mistakes can be rectified and other opinions on suitability can be reflected before I put this into a blog record.
(Aug 2017 AlanWilkinson)
Slot-it Part numbers represent a combination of DWG (sizing) and compound.
Sizing OuterDiameter x TyreWidth in millimetres.
The DWG in parenthesis below represents the tyre mold used to make the tyre and therefore this fixes the unfitted tyre size) .
The DWG does not represent the material used. I'll list that further below.
14.2 X 8 (1096)
14.6X 8.4 (1214)
16.1 X 8 (1088)
17.2 X 9.5 (1159)
17.8 X 9.5 (1228)
19.5 X 9.5 (1209*)
19.8 X 9.8 (1140)
16.5 X 10 (1067)
17 X 10 (1170)
17.8 X 10.5 (1167)
18 X 10 (1207)
18.5 X 10 (1045)
18.8 X 10 (1027)
19 X 10 (1042*)
19.5 X 10 (1171 & 1121)
20 X 10.5 (1120)
20.2 X 10.5 (1046*)
19 X 10.5 (1152)
19.9 X 10.5 (1046)
20 X 11.3 (1172)
19.8 X 12.2 (1028)
20.4 X 12.4 (1068 from "slot.it" and packaging) but the actual tyre shows a DWG of 1608 on the sidewall.
(* is a tyre for sale on some websites but not listed by "slot.it")
Sometimes the DWG number is incorporated into the part number, sometimes not.
Sizing inner diameter:
Typically manufacturers list their wheels by the largest diameter (the bead) which is not the same as the rim diameter (visible once the tyre is fitted)
Slot.it do not list inner diameters but the non "F1" tyres seem to fit wheels on 15mm (bead measurement) 13.5 mm (rim) without stretching.
15mm appears to be the smallest wheel these tyres will fit onto.
These tyres will easily stretch to fit a "non air hub" rim of 15.5mm but deform badly if fitted to an air hub of similar size, sinking into the air well and ruining the contact patch. The tyres can also be stretched further with gentle warming.
The F1 tyres have the same inner rim diameter (12mm) but are a lot less stretchable and will only fit hubs listed as "F1" type. They will fit "Formula1" hubs from slot-it, NSR and and All-Slot-Car.
Unfitted tyre Diameters taken from actual tyre digital calliper measurements:
1068/1608 has an inner rim diameter of 12mm
1170-E1 has an inner rim diameter of 12mm
1207-f22 has an inner rim diameter of 12mm
Compounds and durometer hardness.
All compounds are "rubber" unless stated, eg "S1" and "sponge".
Slot-IT does not make Urethane tyres.
The single letter refers to the compound used.
In some cases, The number is the durometer measurement, in others , lower number is harder, bigger numbers are softer. Both are a way to measure how hard the tyre is.
Slot it seem to have moved from the "1 to 4 " numbers to durometer readings, then back again but it's not possible to know why this would be.
"N22 and F22 are two very different compounds, expect more N22 to come soon in smaller formats" (Maurizio Ferrari 2012)
Compound, hardness and descriptions taken from various sources
- P1 hard for smooth plastic tracks - Discontinued ?
- P2 Medium for smooth plastic tracks - Discontinued ?
- P3 Soft, for use on smooth plastic track
- P4 Anti-wear for use on abrasive plastic track (Ninco)
- P5 ?
- P6 ?
- S1 (Silicone) smooth dust free track
- Z series tyres (Low Grip), for front wheels
- C1
- F15
- F22
- F35
- E1 "harder but grip very well on Ninco" (track) (MF 2012)
- N18
- N22 "A racing compound (N, 22 Shore hardness) which from our testing works extremely well at least on Ninco, wood, and that can be glued and trued equally as well" MF 2012)
"For the F and N series, the number is the shore hardness" (MF 2012)
We can deduce then, for others , the lower the number the harder the compound.
"All of the different tyres will fit on any of the hubs which Slot.it produce, with one exception - the F1 tyres (SIPT13/14/16) and F1 hubs (SIPA20ALB/ALG/ALS/MG) can only be used with each other" slot city.co.uk
When slot-it were asked which compound was best suited to which surface:
"It's very difficult to say, because there are so many track combinations out there, that I'd consider (it) inappropriate and misleading writing something like 'you will break your track record with this tyre' when we release a compound. Horses for courses.
And, on the other hand, I can't test the tyre on all existing surfaces.
N22 is a racing compound (N, 22 Shore A hardness) which from our testing works extremely well at least on Ninco, wood, and that can be glued and trued equally as well. Reports from other readers seem to confirm such statement"
- Maurizio Ferrari
Backup information:
From Wikipedia
Hardness may be defined as a material's resistance to indentation. The durometer scale was defined by Albert Ferdinand Shore, who developed a device to measure Shore hardness in the 1920s. The term durometer is often used to refer to the measurement as well as the instrument itself. Durometer is typically used as a measure of hardness in polymers, elastomers, and rubbers.[1]
And finally... Using this information.
Club newbie : "use what everyone else is using"
Mid pack wannabe : "anything here that might fit and work better than the club norm?"
Home track user (upgrading) : "measure your wheels , choose a DWG size then look at the compounds available that might be suitable for your track.
Shelf queen collectors : there is nothing useful for you here at all 😀
AlanW