Wide Tyres Vs Narrow tyres

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Wester

Guru
In these cold and icy weather conditions that we have at present do wide tyres like mountain bike tyres give you a better grip on the road or is there no difference ?
 

HovR

Über Member
Location
Plymouth
Excluding studded tires, no tire will grip on a sheet of ice. Despite that, I still find wider low pressure tires more stable on the ice, so that's what I use when it's icy about.

If you're really worried about ice, have a long commute, or want to remain out on the bike during cold spells, get a pair of Marathon Winters or similar.
 

Moodyman

Legendary Member
I use a rigid MTB with 1.75 inch semi slicks in winter. Feels far more sure-footed on greasy damp roads then the slicks on my road bike. But my commute is on main roads which are well gritted. On icy roads need studded tyres as above.
 

Lance Jack

Über Member
Location
A BFPO somewhere
Is this one of these "Which would win out of a Pitbull and a Shark" questions?

I think if there was a knife fight, with a wide tyre versus a narrow tyre, the wide tyre would win.

If there were no knives or guns, it would be pretty close but the wide tyre would still edge it.
The shark in water but the pitbull on land
 

green1

Über Member
On snow and ice you want tyres as thin as possible. This reduces your contact patch and increases the pressure on the contact area which will help create more traction, also a long thin contact area will have more directional stability than a short fat one. Most studded tyres are fatter but that is to allow room for the studs. Don't believe me, compare WRC cars on their normal tyres:
Citroen-C4-WRC-8_1775713i.jpg






and then them running in the swedish rally, the tyres look comically thin compared to normal.
Rally-Sweden_2011-kyn_chung.jpg
 
On snow and ice you want tyres as thin as possible. This reduces your contact patch and increases the pressure on the contact area which will help create more traction, also a long thin contact area will have more directional stability than a short fat one. Most studded tyres are fatter but that is to allow room for the studs. Don't believe me, compare WRC cars on their normal tyres:

and then them running in the swedish rally, the tyres look comically thin compared to normal.


Why do you use photographs of prototype hovercars to demonstrate a point about tyres and contact patches?

One might as well use photographs of Mongolian Throat Singers to demonstrate a point about the Moon.

I despair of Cycle Chat sometimes....
 

green1

Über Member
You try find a picture with them on the ground where you can see the relative width of the tyres. The very fact he's in the air at all while driving in snow and ice tells you a lot about the tyres they use. Tyres work in the same way on 4 wheels or 2 wheels no matter what you say about the relative merits of the propulsion system.
 

oldroadman

Veteran
Location
Ubique
Don't the rally cars use winter tyres, which are a special compound to retain flexibility below 7c, and as they are being used in competition probably wear very fast? For me, it was always 25's that gave the best ride and decent grip on wet and mucky/muddy roads, hit a sheet of ice and that's not a good combination with two wheels, whichever tyres you use. Trike, anyone^_^?
 

Mr Haematocrit

msg me on kik for android
Its a misconception that skinny is always better for the snow. The question is why do most people think that. Well watch any WRC video from the snow and your going to see some super skinny tires. But look closer at those tires, they are all studded tires. The reason they run skinny studded tires is for this fact. The studs only really work when they reach down into the compacted snow/ice. And the best way to do that is to put more weight over a smaller track, hence the very narrow tires. As such it matters if the Snow is compacted or not and this effects the choice of tyres
 
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