>wouldn’t there be a possibility of overheating and bursting?
Car tires can cope with pressures far higher than their actual recommended running pressure. This isn’t a problem.
Bear in mind that when you drive, friction from the road and from the deformation of the tire with each rotation already substantially increases the tire temperature without difficulty.
It just isn’t a concern.
Rubber tires started out white because that was the color of natural rubber. But natural rubber is soft and they wore out quite quickly. Eventually a guy named **Charles Goodyear** invented vulcanized rubber, a way of treating rubber with sulfur and other chemicals to create cross-linked molecules that made the rubber much tougher. As you probably picked up by now he used this invention to make better tires.
Part of the ingredients in these better tires are 20-30% carbon, specifically a form of fine particulate carbon called “carbon black”. This makes the tires stronger, more conductive to heat helping to cool the treads (we *want* them conductive), and protects the tire from UV damage from sunlight. It also makes them emphatically black. If you want them another color you had better paint them because you can’t make them out of 30% carbon black and expect any other dye or pigment to show up while having anything left for, you know, **tire**.
Way back it the aughts, I worked for an ad agency with Michelin as a client, and when we asked this very question, in addition to the answer already mentioned about vulcanized rubber processing, they said that other colors just get really dirty really fast, and they look terrible when they are dirty.
All the other answers, plus they make colored tyres too, used primarily for burnouts. The smoke they generate has a colored dye added to it, and they offer somewhat lesser traction. Some brands selling then are Highway Max and Kumho.
Watch this Good Ol’ TG video about these tyres: youtu.be/zyAVy20mEUA
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