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  2. Rain tyre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rain_tyre

    Lewis Hamilton competes through the rain at the 2016 Monaco Grand Prix. The treads of his wet tyres are visible. A rain tyre or wet tyre (spelt tire in American English, commonly shortened to wet) is a special tyre used in motorsport in wet weather as opposed to a slick tyre used in dry conditions. It is very similar in many ways to the tyres ...

  3. 2018 Argentine Republic motorcycle Grand Prix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Argentine_Republic...

    Having been declared a wet race at the time of the sighting lap, all but one rider selected rain tires. Pole-sitter Jack Miller being the only rider to initially go out on slick tires. Prior to the warm-up lap, every rider on rain tires elected to return to the pits to change to slick tires.

  4. Racing slick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racing_slick

    The first drag racing slick was developed by M&H Tires (Marvin & Harry Tires) in the early 1950s. It was the only company in the world that produced and sold original drag racing tyres. Drag racing slicks vary in size, from slicks used on motorcycles to very wide ones used on "top fuel" dragsters.

  5. 1989 Nations motorcycle Grand Prix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_Nations_motorcycle...

    The 1989 Nations motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifth race of the 1989 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. It took place on the weekend of 12–14 May 1989 at the Misano circuit, located near the town of Misano Adriatico ( Province of Rimini ) in the frazione of Santa Monica-Cella.

  6. NASCAR: Christopher Bell wins rain-delayed New Hampshire race

    www.aol.com/sports/nascar-christopher-bell-wins...

    Christopher Bell won NASCAR’s marathon Cup Series race at New Hampshire on Sunday. Bell won the rain-delayed race ahead of Chase Briscoe and Josh Berry as the entire field was using rain tires.

  7. Grand Prix motorcycle racing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Prix_motorcycle_racing

    Each race is a 45-minute sprint, completed without any fuel or tire stops. In 2005, a flag-to-flag rule for MotoGP was introduced. Previously, if a race started dry and rain fell, officials could red-flag (stop) the race and either restart or resume on 'wet' tyres.