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A wheel/tire combination balanced using traditional weights will always be "in balance".
Actually, it will be pretty good when it leaves the shop but will change a bit with wear. Small point, not going to argue.
A wheel/tire combination balanced using small balls inside the tire itself won't always be "in balance".
When the tire strikes a pothole/curb/etc., those balls/beads will be temporarily displaced out of position, and during the time between impact and up until the balls/beads reassemble themselves into "balance", the tire will be out of balance.
The same is true for starting from a dead-stop. The video above demonstrates this phenomena. Until the beads/balls migrate into a balanced position as the wheel comes up to speed, the wheel is out of balance.
Agreed.
So - for some portion of the time that the wheel is in motion, a tire balanced using beads/balls will be out of balance, imposing stresses on the equipment a traditionally balanced wheel will never experience.
In my mind, the question now becomes: Is the aggregate of the of time when the wheel is out of balance while the beads/balls align themselves from start-up or after an impact with an irregularity in the road surface enough so that over time, these additional stresses and strains shorten the life of components (tires, wheels, axles, bearings, suspensions, etc.)? Even if it's only a fraction of a second in each instance, over the life of the components, those fractions add up to minutes and then hours of exposure to forces for which the component might not be designed.
I have never felt the beads positioning themselves. Guys on the track do because they change speeds so quickly. Don't use DynaBeads on the track. My belief is that a well balanced set of tires(almost all the time) far outweighs any unbalanced set-up time. It's only 2 ounces plus original imbalance = 4 ounces worst case. for about 100 revolutions.
I'm mostly just thinking out loud here. My degree is in the social sciences, so I have no expertise in applied physics. Actual physicists are encouraged to check my math.
But Officer, you see how they work right?
Do I have a convert? Just for the principle, not about warranty or wear or the points you've made.
Just the principle.
It's not something for nothing, it's just using the physics to advantage.