
Not before time though, I reckon. The lines of hot tar dripped into the cracks are fine in summer, but are a tad skatey in the wet

Just think of how much fun it will be once they finish it!



Smitty wrote:yeah
stay away from reefton for the next week or two
bloody Vicroads are gunna phark it all up
...gunna blue metal the WHOLE lot
so goodbye nice smooth surface![]()
and lots of loose stuff while they do it
...bloody idiots
Strika wrote:The good thing about the blue metal, is that it tends to melt less in hot weather, and in the wet it is really grippy, as the water drains from the surface quickly. I think the surface on the black spur wont take long to go all shiny.
Smitty wrote:Strika wrote:The good thing about the blue metal, is that it tends to melt less in hot weather, and in the wet it is really grippy, as the water drains from the surface quickly. I think the surface on the black spur wont take long to go all shiny.
Strika
my neighbour..who is a road engineer with one of the companies
who contract to VicRoads has always told me........
Cured or seasoned hotmix (with no road marking) is the best surface
for bikes..wet or dry (he sez look at any racing circuit or PI for example)
but blue metal surfaces??
In the wet it provides LESS surface area grip for bike tyres (even if surface drainage is better) and
bike riders should take more care on open surface (coarse) blue metal roadmix when wet...coz its more slippery
will ask him about hot weather performance again
(I can't remember what he said)
cheers
smek wrote:now not being an asphalt expert like the rest of you seem to be I just need you to answer me one question. what did they use on the black spur? more of that on reefton will be fine thanks. It's grippy as hell in the wet or dry.