Unless you are using bias ply hoosier autocrossers, or the old radial
autocross compound, the current crop of R tires is not gummy enough to
seriously pick gravel and rocks.  In fact, the highway driving will clean
them off.
Even on my soft slicks, after a manual brushing, The drive wheels seem to
be fully clean by the first or 2nd turn, with the rears coming up to temp
and cleaning off in about 3 turns.
About all you might sacrifice would be 1-2 corners of the first run, and
this only if they were very dirty.
Stan Whitney
GS talon awd
DP CRX
At 09:16 PM 6/24/99 -0500, Brian M Kennedy wrote:
>Driving R-compound tires over gravel or dirt roads results in lots
>of small stones getting impaled into the rubber.  You can easily 
>pop them out, but you'll have a small depression or slit where
>the stone once was.
>
>Now for the questions:
>
>1) If you drive to an event and end up carrying a lot of small
>   rocks in your rubber, what is the impact on the stickiness
>   of your tires??  Should you take the time to pick out all 
>   the impaled stones?
>
>2) What is the effect of small gaps, depressions, or gashes in
>   the rubber?  They are nowhere near through the tread, so the
>   integrity of the tire is not compromised.  But the traction
>   may be affected?  Or the wear of the tread may be accelerated?
>
>3) Should I be careful to keep my R-tires off gravel/dirt?
>   Or should I not worry about it?
>
>Thoughts?
>
>Thanks,
>
>Brian
>
>
 
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