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Old 05-10-05 | 12:26 AM
  #18  
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Raiyn
I drink your MILKSHAKE
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Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 15,061
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From: St. Petersburg, FL

Bikes: 2003 Specialized Rockhopper FSR Comp, 1999 Specialized Hardrock Comp FS, 1971 Schwinn Varsity

Originally Posted by monkey69
still i am not a friend of slicks.too dangerous when wet or you run through some slimy **** in the city .
Applesauce. I ride my slick equipped bike rain or shine and the only time I have any trouble is on painted road sections that I've slipped on with knobbies as well.
Bicycle tires for on-road use have no need of any sort of tread features; in fact, the best road tires are perfectly smooth, with no tread at all!

Unfortunately, most people assume that a smooth tire will be slippery, so this type of tire is difficult to sell to unsophisticated cyclists. Most tire makers cater to this by putting a very fine pattern on their tires, mainly for cosmetic and marketing reasons. If you examine a section of asphault or concrete, you'll see that the texture of the road itself is much "knobbier" than the tread features of a good quality road tire. Since the tire is flexible, even a slick tire deforms as it comes into contact with the pavement, acquiring the shape of the pavement texture, only while incontact with the road.

People ask, "But don't slick tires get slippery on wet roads, or worse yet, wet metal features such as expansion joints, paint stripes, or railroad tracks?" The answer is, yes, they do. So do tires with tread. All tires are slippery in these conditions. Tread features make no improvement in this.
The rest never copies well so here it is in jpg form.


http://www.sheldonbrown.com/tires.html
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