"We have all heard the stories about Ricky Racer crashing his bike cause he was running race tires on the street & couldn't keep them warm enough etc & while there is some validity to those stories because the rubber compounds are designed to work in certain heat ranges, the overall statement is false & usually nothing more than an excuse for rider error. Cold race tires still stick better than a cold street tire."
Is this true?
I'd say so. I went out on stone cold Dunlop slicks onto a wet track and was still able to ride at a decent clip. I was surprised."We have all heard the stories about Ricky Racer crashing his bike cause he was running race tires on the street & couldn't keep them warm enough etc & while there is some validity to those stories because the rubber compounds are designed to work in certain heat ranges, the overall statement is false & usually nothing more than an excuse for rider error. Cold race tires still stick better than a cold street tire."
Is this true?
Grooves or more correctly - sipes in the tread do most of the water channelling, and also contain the remaining moisture to prevent it from laying on top of the contact patch.
So sipes, not the compound would be the main reason for tire's performance in wet conditions.
Therefore, the statement in the article is incorrect.
.