Slick tyres. Advice & reassurance needed

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gaz

Cycle Camera TV
Location
South Croydon
I think you will find that it is the composition of the tyre more than the tread that gives grip. The favoured tyre for a formula 1 car is a slick, wet weather tyres have a tread designed to get the water away from the tyre because the more rubber that hits the road the better the grip. Slicks with a heavy rubber content will wear quickly because of this.
There is a fundamental difference between a bicycle slick tyre and a F1 slick tyre. Whilst what you are saying is technically correct. Your comparison to F1 is not the best.
 

gaz

Cycle Camera TV
Location
South Croydon
Soory but your original was:

which is gibberish as tread and tyre width are unconnected.

Cycle tyres cannot aquaplane therefore do not need tread to remove water.

1. Cycle tyres grip the road by close (errm, intimate) contact of rubber and road surface
ie the rubber deforms to grip the road surface: the more rubber in contact with the tarmac the better the grip.

2.Tread reduces the amount of rubber in contact with the road surface

3. ergo tread reduces grip = slicks provide better grip.


read Sheldon's linked article.
Cycle tyres can aquaplane, just at speeds which are unobtainable without using some sort of aero suit and going down a mountain.
just to clarify for others reading, 3 is correct for bicycle tyres but not for tyres used on other vehicles such as cars.
 

PK99

Legendary Member
Location
SW19
Cycle tyres can aquaplane, just at speeds which are unobtainable without using some sort of aero suit and going down a mountain.
just to clarify for others reading, 3 is correct for bicycle tyres but not for tyres used on other vehicles such as cars.

Why post a deliberately confusing post? Speed required at 100 psi is over 100mph :

The ultimate recorded max is 208 mph "Riding on a rolling road after being towed to 100 mph, on a custom made £1,000,000 bicycle" - no standing water there then!

the down hill record is 138mph "]Downhill on snow, on a prototype bicycle" - no standing water there either!

The flat surface, unpaced record speed is 83mph and the down hill - there could be standing water there, but, hey, the speed is not hight enough

To all intents and purposes a cycle tyre does not aquaplane
 

Widge

Baldy Go
Mi average speed at the moment is just about double figures.

Has I got a problem with aquaplaing? :eek:
 
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