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12 comments
Should imagine the new Tarmac was the prob' very oily and slippery when new.
Bit like diesel on the road.
CF does hit the deck a lot, but he's a winner and has a great team behind him (and in front of him if you know what I mean) he did well with downhill when he took the lead on the early stages.
Not sure how tubs vs clinchers makes a difference. Tubs cross section is often more circular than clincher's 'U' so some might say they were more 'predictable' at various lean angles. But irrelevant once you pass the friction limit. Which would be low on wet, newly laid tarmac
There's new tarmac all along today's route, some of it less than 48 hours old.
Unfortunately...Today it rained for the first time in a week meaning that the surface would get very slippery.
Combination of wet roads/white lines and tubs probably inflated too hard for the conditions plus being in a hurry
I wonder if clinchers would have been better in the wet.
This have nothing to do with mounting system weather its clincher or tubular or tubeless or whatever . . .
When its slip, everything goes upside down in sec
Tires pressure play big role here as well, too hard and you lose grip exchanged for speed
I wondered whether the teams anticipated wet roads and altered pressures to suit? I would have, I'd always take the possibility (not inevitable) of a very slight increase in rolling resistance over running too high a pressure every time. Lots of people wrongly equate harder tyres = faster, even though it has been repeatedly shown not to be the case.
Jens said on ITV that Froome and Nibali were off the front of the group - they had attacked the group on a wet descent. Not the most sensible tactic if safety is your main goal, as Froome had stated before the stage.
The tour almost got interesting for a few minutes. Let's hope tomorrow isn't another Sky procession up a mountain.
If you watch, Nibali's wheel stepped out on the tarmac, not on the white line, so the road itself must have been slick on that corner.
Was almost too good to be true: Froome going a whole grand tour without hitting the deck.
Looks like it was on the white line - slippery paint...?
yes, I'm always wary of white lines when it's wet...
Luca Paolini was much better on white lines, regardless of the weather.