Ajax Bay
Guru
- Location
- East Devon
In all the Fiber Grip application videos I've seen they are always very liberal with the paste, it is not applied just to the clamping area but to the whole of the post . Fiber Grip creates friction between surfaces - larger surfaces equals more friction. Yes, the post will still need to be clamped but any additional friction created by the paste outside of the clamping area is not zero.
If you want to ignore the science: feel free.Of course they want you to use the paste up quickly as possible but this liberal application is not unique to the Finish Line video. All I'm saying is the paste is creating friction between the surfaces including surfaces outside of the clamping area.
Any "additional friction" "created by the paste" or otherwise between the section of the seat post more than an inch down the seat tube is minimal (close to zero).
"Larger surfaces equals more friction" only if there's a force operating between the two surfaces: in this case there isn't below the top inch (max).
The seat clamp only compresses the top of the seat tube (metal frame like yours): there is no centripetal force (caused by the compressive force of the clamp) in the rest of the seat tube so even if the paste increases the coefficient of friction between post and tube a tad, any resultant force resisting the seat post sinking will be negligible compared to frictional force in the top (max) inch.