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Are you seriousThere's no salt in sand except residual crystals where it gets washed by the sea on the beach. Normal sand has no salt at all. It's mainly quartz (silicon dioxide).
It's no problem to ride a fat-bike on sand, but you don't want to take it anywhere near the sea or the beach. Saltwater will get into every crevice, where it's highly corrosive. It's hygroscopic, so even after it dries out, it'll re-absorb any moisture in the air to carry on its corrosion.
Firstly this thread was started with the title "fat bikes on beach"
So stupid me to assume we are talking about sand at the beach which has salt in it end of ,
Which way do you think the sand got there ?
I can assure you it didnt fall from the sky , you will probably find it gets there from rock erosion fragments of shelled creatures amongst other things over millions of years , this is all caused by the actions of the sea and tides ,
And as another point where in the uk do you get sand in general apart from the beach
If for some strange reason your particular beach doesnt have salt in its sand (that's sarcasm) the sand its self is really abrasive and absolutely knackers bikes especially the gear train
So would I recommend to anyone to take a fat bike on the beach the answer is no unless of course you have no mechanical sympathy for your equipment or your that minted you dont care and if thats the case go for it as you can afford to fix it .