So I have a problem understanding the torques on a tire as it accelerates from rest. Suppose I have a tire with mass $m = 10kg$, radius $r = 0.5m$ and I apply torque with magnitude $\tau = 30Nm$ to its axis. The force with which the tire pushes on the ground should be equal to $\tau / r$, so 60N. The maximum friction force $F_{f(max)} = \mu m g = 78.4N$, where $\mu = 0.8$ and $g = 9.8m/s^2$ so the force from the tire doesn't exceed the maximum friction force. And that means it won't slip. According to Newton's third law, the force produced by the tire is counteracted by an equal in magnitude and opposite in direction friction force $F_f = -F = 60N$. That friction creates torque about the axis of rotation which is in opposite direction to the torque I started with and has magnitude $\tau_f = F_f r = 30Nm$ so they should completely cancel out, leaving 0 net torque on the tire and that means it won't rotate. I must be wrong somewhere because the tire will obviously accelerate when a torque is applied to it. I've read somewhere that some of the torque goes for the angular acceleration of the tire and not all of it produces the force at the bottom of the tire. Is that in any way correct?
Any help would be appreciated!