Banjo
Fuelled with Jelly Babies
- Location
- South Wales
I tend to leave them on year round .
I wonder if any scientific experiment has been done.
I wonder if any scientific experiment has been done.
Did bonj not prove you don't actually need mudguards if you cycle fast enough?
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I think that was the extent of the proofIf your arse is moving fast enough how're the drops gonna catch up? stands to reason.
It's a little known fact that mudguards actually speed you up.
The upper surface of the tyre travels forward at a speed of pi/2 times the bike's road speed. This results in additional drag which is negated by the faring effect of the mudguard. Tests show a small but significant decrease (between 2and 5%) in aerodynamic drag when mudguards are used.
The reason that professionals don't use them is because they are illegal. They were controversially banned by Henri Desgrange after the 1935 Tour de France, as he considered them "unmanly" and "fit only for the English and the Dutch". Attempts to reintroduce them have failed due to safety concerns around the mudguard stays.
Lance Armstrong used mudguards in all of his Tour de France wins, but everyone pretended not to notice. Phil Liggett still denies it and to this day claims that it is "impossible and inconceivable" that he could have done such a thing.