
Originally Posted by
red_eh_4
I also think it's hard to understand completely- but my driveway is 1 car wide, and I had an entire 1 foot thick block of ice running from the front to back of my driveway all along my house from blocks falling off the roof and collecting on the driveway next to the house... it was too cold, and impossible to pick up at the time, and I had to move my car out at one point, and I think that's where the issue happened. The ice was not typical... it was jagged, rough, uneven, and THICKKKKK. I'm talking... It would crush you if you had been under it... multiply that out by a few weeks of subzero temps in NY, and snow, and then you've got what I had running down my driveway against my house for a good 25 feet!!
If ice would slice tires then you would find dozens of people on the highways with shredded tires. Ice does not slice tires, it never can be sharpened to that fine of an edge. Ice did not damage your tire. It's something metallic and sharp and with the car in motion there is enough pressure to puncture and slice.
I live in NorthEast CT, have lived in Vermont and the Alps. Have skied all my life. I have driven too many winters to even consider your theory. Not plausible.

Originally Posted by
red_eh_4
Thank you for the advice. But I have to say I don't really agree with your assessment that ice can't slice, or puncture under friction. So are you telling me if you took a rubber ball (say tennis ball) and went up to a jagged piece of ice in 0 degree weather that's .5'' inches thick it wouldn't cut it? I seriously doubt that. Also- I'm not sure I'm understanding what the difference between "Wide" and "Long" is? The cut is probably 1.5 inches in length, and .25 inches deep / Wide, and maybe 1/8 inch tall high. It looks like someone took a swiss army knife and cut from below the wheel in to the tire, and then towards them 1.5 inches and .25 inches down.
A tennis ball is a completely different mix of compounds. Not even comparable. Again ice never sharpens to a knife edge capable of slicing thru a tires rubber composite.
Because of friction, there is always friction present when one object rubs against another. Friction results in heat, which where ice is concerned melts.
This is also why cars often do not go anywhere on snow / ice covered roads without proper winter tires. Tire spins, causing friction which melts snow ice and the tire floats on a thin film of water sandwiched between the frozen water ( ice/snow ) and the tires contact patch...
Length is from point to point = 1.5" meaning from 0 to 1.5" linear measurement is your length.
Width is perpendicular to the length ( 90 degrees )
Depth is thickness measurement from surface to bottom of cut / gash.
It's also possible someone could have sliced your tire. Does the cut travel from the lip of your wheel towards the center ? If so then it very likely is from someone attempting to vandalize.
If however the cut is in the same direction as a rotating tire than you ran into something sharp.... NOT ICE !!!
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