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When you slide on a wet road surface you are aquaplaning, also known as hydroplaning.
The damp road surface, plus the momentum of the car's weight going round a bend, could cause a loss of friction, resulting in a slide.
it is your tires
When the road is very wet, the tires lose contact with the road..
Less traction on a wet road so the stopping distance increases.
Stopping distance
Yes. There is less frictional force between the car tyres and a wet road surface than with a dry road surface.
The weels would slide The weels would slide The weels would slide
Yes, just like any other car. Chuck, CABGx3
to show how well the car handles in "not-so-perfect" road conditions.
It doesn't wet roads take traction away from racing cars. Race cars are fastest with slick tires, when the road is wet it forces them to use threaded tires to dissplace the water. If the racers want to slide easily around corners that the wet road would be helpful
a car itself is pretty heavy, all the weigt of it is equally divided by the four wheels. A tire of a car has carves in it to make it have more grip on the road. The cars' weigt and the grip it has on the road combined is what a car keeps from slipping on a dry road when the road is wet it has less grip on the road but still the same weigt. so when your driving the kinetic energy caused by the speed of the car and the weigt can cause the car to slip. i hope this is a good answer for you but i know i have made alot of writing errors.