Yellow Saddle
Guru
- Location
- Loch side.
And compared to roads in Europe, the roads in the UK are a disgrace.
Book a holiday in beautiful Costa Rica.
And compared to roads in Europe, the roads in the UK are a disgrace.
But, if you have a contact patch of 200mm^2 on your 28mm (wide) tyre and a contact patch of 150mm^2 on your 20mm wide tyre and you corner over a tiny slick of oil of 100mm^2, you will have 100mm^2 in reserve on the large tyre and just 50mm^2 on the narrow tyre. Should the 50mm^2 thus just not be enough to keep traction, you will slide on the narrow tyre but not the wider tyre.
But have a careful look at the scenario. It is pretty unlikely and probably far-fetched.
Something I don't think your post touched on was pressures. I've heard it said that lower pressures = more grip. Is this a myth? If not, then doesn't the fact that a wider tyre can be effectively run at 10-15psi lower than the narrower tyre mean that actually it could give better traction?The wider tyre will NOT give you better traction
Something I don't think your post touched on was pressures. I've heard it said that lower pressures = more grip. Is this a myth? If not said:I was thinking the same thing, a lower pressure should equal a greater contact patch with the road, giving you more grip. The trade off I suppose is less responsive turn in?.
And compared to roads in Europe, the roads in the UK are a disgrace.
Yes, Adrian, obviously it would. However, each time there is a broken spoke reported, it was because of the poor state of the roads. The two are not related. Each time someone gets a puncture, it is blamed on the poor states of the road. It isn't. Pinch flats excluded.Wouldn't it be more positive to aim for good cycling surfaces for all, not justify poor ones because other people have worse.
IMO the thing is once you have lost traction on a wet road you're very unlikely to get it back.Thanks, this is helpful and insightful, as was the rest of your post. In relation to the extracted section, and recognising that the specific example scenario is unlikely, do the same principles not also apply to the much more likely scenario of cornering on a wet road surface? You'll have to forgive my scientific naivety here, but what I'm getting at is, isn't there a theoretically definable (assuming all variables of speed, rider weight etc were factored in) breaking point at which a cornering tyre will slip on a wet road? And wouldn't one of the affecting variables in this equation be size of contact patch? Ergo a greater contact patch on a wider tyre would mean the 'breaking point' at which the tyre lost traction would be less easily achieved? This may be nonsense, I'm just trying to better understand in layman's terms how this works.
Something I don't think your post touched on was pressures. I've heard it said that lower pressures = more grip. Is this a myth? If not, then doesn't the fact that a wider tyre can be effectively run at 10-15psi lower than the narrower tyre mean that actually it could give better traction?
I agree but I'm not sure how your point relates to my questions? Sorry if I'm being dim!IMO the thing is once you have lost traction on a wet road you're very unlikely to get it back.
No.Thanks, this is helpful and insightful, as was the rest of your post. In relation to the extracted section, and recognising that the specific example scenario is unlikely, do the same principles not also apply to the much more likely scenario of cornering on a wet road surface? You'll have to forgive my scientific naivety here, but what I'm getting at is, isn't there a theoretically definable (assuming all variables of speed, rider weight etc were factored in) breaking point at which a cornering tyre will slip on a wet road? And wouldn't one of the affecting variables in this equation be size of contact patch? Ergo a greater contact patch on a wider tyre would mean the 'breaking point' at which the tyre lost traction would be less easily achieved? This may be nonsense, I'm just trying to better understand in layman's terms how this works.
This year I gave up reporting as they had been reported and had cones/spray paint around them but not much was done for weeks.
Slick.Phew! first of all I hope Roosters bruises are healing nicely, second I am still confused on whether to replace my Nobbly MTB tryes with a more Slick tyre for Winter commuting in a urban area![]()
I report them - certainly more than I complain in public about them. The council responses to them the last few years ranges between canned responses (most of the time) through to silence, which was once followed by an admission of complete inability to find a 3m x 1m crater on the inside of a sharp bend on National Route 11!However, I bet that many complaints here about a pothole is just that a complaint. Very few people report them. Our council has fixed every single pothole I reported within days. I catch people out when they complain and said the council did nothing. I ask them for the complaint reference number so I can follow up. My offer is not taken up.
I sense a lot of whining about things but not a lot of participation and understanding. Do you know anyone who has ever attended a council budget meeting in order to get an understanding of the finances and priorities of the budget?
I'm pretty sure that if the chairman didn't declare a conflict of interest and excuse themselves, they should have been punished IMO.I have attended my Parish Councils meetings, they're funny to be honest, the week after getting approval for a mobile phone mast on Parish land they spent a chunk of the money from the mast on giving the clerk who was the chairmans wife a pay rise! I sorta gave up on local government after that!