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Old 11-03-08 | 02:09 AM
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sunburst
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Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,882
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From: SF Bay Area

Bikes: Peugeot, Motobecane, Joannou, Kona, Specialized, Ironhorse, Royal Scot, Dahon

physics, fenders and mud

This really has very little to do with mt. biking, but who else is really going to really appreciate mud, besides you guys?

This is about my recent decision to being car-free, and my new fenders, just installed Thurs, so I can cycle through the winter. Well, we had our first real rain Sat, but today (Sunday) was great so I cycled out to the farmer's market and took the long way home around the bay. Went off-road for fun and very quickly remembered that the levies around here turn into this thick sticky mud. I had street tires on my old rigid-fork Rockhopper so I thought I was cool with the mud. Plus my fenders were going to protect me - right?

Within 30-40 feet I had collected so much mud I was slipping and sliding. A few feet more and I seized up. I mean the damned wheels wouldn't even turn - mud in the brakes, fenders, everywhere. And not a stick in sight! So I tried dragging the bike up a hill to a paved bike/pedestrian trail and the bike felt like it weighted at least half a ton more than normal. Finally got enough mud off it to start turning the wheels and eventually found a branch a quarter mile or so up the trail.

So anyway, while brushing up on physics a few hours later (hey, what do you do in your spare time!?! - actually I'm just trying to help my son survive high school), I read this section on rolling vs sliding friction and the advantages of the wheel. From my old college text: "in rolling, the microscopic contact welds are 'peeled' apart rather than 'sheared' apart as in sliding. This will reduce the frictional force by a large factor."

Oh.
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