yeah in a snowblowerThat spring loaded "constant tension " pulley is very interesting . Has anyone used one , maybe even for other purposes . If it works as stated on the website that could be the ticket .
Interesting roller, but will it get smaller? I can see it changing loading. Seems if you were to put a lot of load on it it would flatten offering more surface to the tire. Is that bigger or smaller or the same? The perimeter rubber "ring" above the tear drops has to go some where(in a linear fashion I imagine) so it appears it would oval or something similar. Might not change ratio much but would offer some great grip! Maybe good in the rain. This one is hard for me to figure. What do yall think?I'm sure the answer is going to be yes, but has anyone tried a friction roller from Mcmaster-Carr for a FD bike ?
McMaster-Carr
The Sure-Grip tear drop shaped one looks interesting.....you could increase the pressure on it from a stop for good grip and a lower ratio, then back off for light loads/cruising.
MHF
I think it would act as a smaller roller as u say because the axle is closer to the workFrom my experience with drag racing on wrinkle wall slicks, as the wheel twists inside the tire and the sidewall wrinkles up, the axle centerline gets closer to the ground. The driveline "sees" this as a smaller diameter or shorter tire.
I'm not sure if the tear drop roller would deform like that under pressure, but if it did, it would definately act like a smaller diameter drive roller.
MHF