USA TODAY International Edition

Explorer’s tires seal their own holes

- Mark Phelan

The 2020 Ford Explorer will offer tires that fix themselves. Drivers may not even know they ran over a nail, but here’s what they should know:

The tires allow them to keep traveling after a puncture, in some cases for days without a repair. They use different technology than run-flat tires, which have been criticized for rough rides.

Most drivers won’t even know they had a puncture until they notice a nail stuck in the tire or tire-pressure warnings alert them to a gradual loss of air pressure days after the puncture, according to Michelin engineers.

The concept of self-sealing tires has been around for years, but recent improvemen­ts — and automakers’ eagerness to save weight by eliminatin­g convention­al spares — means we’re going to see more of them.

“Self-sealing tires are designed to handle the most common tire puncture — a small object penetratin­g the tire in the tread area,” said Woody Rogers, director of tire informatio­n for online retailer the Tire Rack.

Michelin makes the Explorer’s selfsealin­g tires. It also supplies them to the Chevrolet Bolt. Most major tire makers have tires with the technology, and the number of choices is only likely to grow.

The inside of the tires is coated with viscous goop that flows into punctures to seal them.

“When the sealant works as designed, most drivers never know it’s working. There is no pressure loss, and odds are the driver doesn’t see the object in the tire or it’s fallen out,” Rogers said.

Creating the rubbery sealant was tricky, Michelin engineers said. It must flow into punctures, but it can’t pool at the bottom of the tire when it’s parked. The material also must form an airtight seal, and flow at temperatur­es from scorching desert blacktop to a frigid winter night.

Unlike run-flat tires, which have stiff

sides that allow them to keep rolling after the air leaks out, self-sealing tires can keep going for days after a nail or similar object punctures them.

Run-flats, which first became common on sports cars that didn’t have room to carry a spare, wear out quickly after losing pressure. They may provide a range of just 50 miles or so before the tire must be replaced.

Michelin’s tires theoretica­lly can keep going for days, though they will eventually need to be repaired or replaced, depending on how severely the puncture damaged the tire. Neither technology is much help when the tires’ sidewall is shredded, as can happen with potholes.

Michelin calls the technology Selfseal. Continenta­l, which supplies selfsealin­g tires to brands from Volkswagen to Bentley, calls its version ContiSeal.

Michelin’s tires can seal punctures up to a quarter-inch. Continenta­l makes a similar claim: one-fifth of an inch.

The tires will be standard on the 2020 Explorer Limited hybrid and Platinum models and optional on the Explorer Limited.

Other tire brands that offer self-sealing tires include Hankook and Pirelli.

The Tire Rack charges about $27 more for a self-sealing 20-inch Michelin Primacy all-season tire for the 2020 Explorer Limited than for the same tire without sealant.

“It’s important to remember selfsealin­g tires are not run-flat tires, and run-flat tires are not self-sealing tires,” Rogers said.

“Convention­al and self-sealing tires go flat without air, and the self-sealing tire works to hold in all that precious air by sealing a tread area injury. But if the puncture hole is too large, or the damage is in the sidewall, then self-sealing tires don’t solve the problem.”

Expect U.S. sales of self-sealing tires to grow rapidly.

Continenta­l and Michelin both recently installed equipment to add the sealant at U.S. tire plants.

 ?? FORD ?? The 2020 Ford Explorer will offer tires lined with an environmen­tally friendly rubber sealant designed to fill most common tread punctures from nails and screws, dramatical­ly slowing the rate at which air leaks.
FORD The 2020 Ford Explorer will offer tires lined with an environmen­tally friendly rubber sealant designed to fill most common tread punctures from nails and screws, dramatical­ly slowing the rate at which air leaks.

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