Washboard is a frequent reality of country roads and this being my country road 
riding season (as the trails haven’t melted yet), it is a reality of my late 
winter, early spring rides. Some observations that perhaps your experience can 
contribute to so we can collectively learn how to more effectively ride these 
corrugated beasties.

— Washboard is nothing but a frequency wave, the cumulative result of traffic, 
weight, speed, and likely others.
— Randomly rough/rocky roads are easier to ride and smoother than equally rough 
washboard because of the regularity of the washboard.
— Like on a river in the rapids, there is oft a ridge where the “waves” cancel 
each other out. Ride the ridge!
— supple tires make a HUGE difference in smoothing out washboard, until the 
wave “frequency” gets too large.
— Small range frequency washboard (tires absorb it, regardless of speed) has a 
much larger range when riding supple tires that stiff walled and flat protected 
tires.
— Medium range frequency washboard (greater than tires absorb, less than 
requires significant slowing) is significantly smoothed out by riding it faster 
so the bike skims along the top.
— Large range frequency washboard (too large for speed to “skim” over the top) 
requires knees and elbows bent, seat off the saddle, and I’ve yet to find a way 
to make it pleasant to ride. Fortunately, it is rare to find a road that has 
greater than short stretches fully covered in width by this range. But those 
quarter mile sections that do have it — UGH!
— Riding with speed into a section I thought (hoped, prayed) was medium 
frequency but rapidly reveals it is large frequency, tests one’s ability to 
grip the bar with three fingers and brake quickly with one. Factors that 
contribute to this deception include cloud cover, angle of the sun, tree cover, 
etc.
— Climbing up medium or large frequency washboard is one of the most 
challenging types of riding I’ve experienced, requiring a mostly-unweighted 
cranking on the pedals, with significant knee bend even at full extention to 
allow room for the bike is flowing up and down beneath me. Fully in the saddle 
and the full effect of the waves is maximized, full standing and the effect of 
the waves is often magnified. As it is, every pedal stroke is unpredictable, 
depending on if each wheel is heading down into the trough or up out of the 
trough.

Your experience and learnings?

With abandon,
Patrick

www.OurHolyConception.org
www.MindYourHeadCoop.org


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