Re: [CR] Wider = faster

(Example: Framebuilders:Alex Singer)

In-Reply-To: <AANLkTind-O9+XRPpNJEqaofPHNf+NKAZ=Lv=12xdpMTw@mail.gmail.com>
References:
Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2011 19:50:57 -0500
From: "Harry Travis" <travis.harry@gmail.com>
To: Julian Shapiro <julianshapiro@gmail.com>
Cc: classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
Subject: Re: [CR] Wider = faster


1. This sentence from the cyclingnews.com article invokes in me a Jon Stewart "Oh, NOOOOOOO"-like protest:

Specialized tyre product manager Wolf vorm Walde claims the Mondo\u2019s replacement \u2013 the Turbo \u2013 is now on-par with the rest of the high-end road tyre market in terms of rolling resistance.

My first and only contact with the "Philadelphia lawyer" -as- villain was one who included a new Specialized Turbo tire, still in box, as part of the all-Campy tub set he listed on ebay. I was happy to find rare NOS tub as a spare. Except it wasn't. Specialized sold Turbos of three kinds, one a glue on and two for clinchers, one of them folding, just like a tub. That's what I got. *Caveat emptor*.

2. Some other time and in the right place, I hope to learn why a remote-control electricity-powered two or three wheel cart isn't the preferred close-to-real world test bed for bicycle tires. The cart, a set of dummies to simulate various masses and energy absorptions, a watt-meter, a wheel-swapper, and a remote-controller.

Send the cart out and back different country roads, and in circles on large vacant parking lots.

Harry Travis Pine Barrens of NJ USA

On Wed, Feb 2, 2011 at 7:21 PM, Julian Shapiro <julianshapiro@gmail.com>wrote:
> >From Velonews:
>
> http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/tech-feature-the-work-of-wheel-energy
>
> Further confirmation of what "our own" Jan Heine has been telling us for
> years.
>
> Julian Shapiro
> in icy icy Sag Harbor, NY
> (where tires don't matter much on the mag-trainer)
> _______________________________________________
>

--
Harry Travis