a bicycle tire is a solid, because it is made out of rubber and rubber is solid. so, therefore, a bicycle tire is a soid.
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No. At the very least you need a bike with solid, nutted axles.
Yes/No/Maybe. There's no solid connection between the length of the serial number and the quality of the bike.
The tyre itself is made of rubber, and is, as such, a solid. However, the air inside it is a gas.
150f is the trail bike where 150r is the motorcross. Trail bike is a good solid bike, as long as you use it for what it's intended, trails. I'm sure it can do some motorocross stuff. If your looking to get into motorcross though, the 150r is better suited.
To make the bike riding experience better than solid wheels.
Since the bike lane is assigned to the bicyclist, they always have the right of way in their lane. If you need to move to the right to make a right turn, you must yield to any bikes in the bike lane.
No solid answer to that. It'd be down to personal preference due to the wide variety of bike types available. It's like asking about what's the best clothes in the world.
Physical changes are changes that only change the appearance of an object, but not the type of matter. For example, if a metal bike rusts the bike will still remain a solid. That is a physical change.
No solid answer to that either, as there are plenty of different types of bicycles out there. Also remember that as we're talking about a human powered vehicle the rider becomes just as, if not more important than the bike.
A "solid rubber bicycle" wouldn't be particularly useful, so I assume that you actually mean a comparison between a solid and an inflated bicycle tire. Answer: It depends. An inflated tire of a very high pressure will compress less than a solid tyre made out of soft rubber. OTOH a hard rubber solid tyre will compress less than a low-pressure inflatable tyre.
There's probably no solid answer to that. A dedicated cyclist would probably always wish for more bike racks, while someone who goes everywhere by car probably couldn't care less.
No. While available, solid bicycle tires - whether for BMX or for any other type of bike - are very rare. But you do need tyres that arae in reasonably good condition and properly inflated.