| Cycling Equipment Need some advice on cycling equipment? Do you have a buckled wheel? Problems with your gears? Need help truing a wheel? |
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#1
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i bought a new bike a BH connect but i find climbing mountain takes extra energy on this bike compare to my giant cadex 15 years old. the rim is shimano 105 which is heavier then campagnolo rim on my cadex. the difference on the back is around 1kg or less. is the rim the cost of my difficulty in climbing or is the geometry of the bike? my new bike is very smooth and calm on flat and small slopes. i sit and climb. sometimes i stand. |
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#2
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It could be a lot of things. Geometry, fitness, 'comfort' with a particular bike, tire size, gearing... I find it hard to believe (although I am not familiar with either bike you refer to) that your new BH ride is heavier than your Giant.
__________________ De Rosa Planet Campagnolo Per Sempre! PAOLO BETTINI CAMPIONE DEL MONDO x 2! |
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#3
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Are the tyres signicantly different on the new bike? Since both bikes have 130mm rear dropout spacing, why don't you put your old wheel in the new bike, and vice-versa, to see if the new wheel is truly the difference. Of course, check the brake pad clearance on the new bike, FIRST ... some shops like to set the pads only a couple of millimeters away from the rim, and if the wheel is flexing it is could be scrubbed by the pads as you climb -- according to 'me' (vs. people who spec double-butted spokes for their wheels), a stiffer wheel is a better wheel. |
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#4
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#5
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Check that your cranks are the same length on each bike This might sound silly, but one degree difference in seat-tube angle can make a bike feel very different. Get a long ruler and check if your bikes are differently set up |
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#6
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...and then there are those days when even the pros complain about feeling like they had an "off day" while en route to some spectacular victory. Feelings and perceptions are a poor tool for measuring reality. John Swanson www.bikephysics.com |
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#7
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I'd be looking at fit differences. Wheel stiffness has got **** to do with anything. Mavic's own tests have shown that riders can't reliably say what wheels are stiff and which ones aren't, and that's a pretty strong statement that stiffness affects climbing as much as a mouthful of piss. Moreover, those results from Mavic pretty much back up what the science and math say. |
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#8
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#9
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#10
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__________________ One life, one chance. Don't waste it! |
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#11
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#12
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#13
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#14
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APPARENTLY, the UofA Engineering Department now teaches that you should accept the subjective feedback of individuals rather than checking the actual elapsed times for a given distance under specific conditions using control & test 'objects'/'subjects' (i.e., different wheels, in the case of MAVIC's tests) ... AND, pretend to draw "scientific" conclusions. I hope the "math" you are referring to isn't Swanson's conclusions based on a single weight (has he done MORE work & posted MORE DATA, subsequently?) -- what was it, measuring the deflection of a single, 5kg (or, was it only 2.5kg?), static weight on various wheels which one was supposed to somehow extrapolate to represent a rider + bike (probable minimum of 65kg combined weight) carving through a turn at more than walking speeds? How can anyone extrapolate anything meaningful from a single point on a graph? OR, is that something else they are teaching in Tucson, now? OR, were you obtusely referring to something else? YOU may be right, but I think your presentation is flawed and consequently your argument with regard to the insignificance of a bicycle wheel's lateral stiffness remains debatable. |
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#15
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First, perhaps you ought to read John's stuff more carefully. Second, there has been no study that has shown any connection between frame or wheel stiffness that significantly or perceptibly improves performance. That is, in science, called a significant negative. Look it up. Third: UofA? Uhm, its UA, and who the hell said I am in Engineering? You should get some remedial reading help. Fourth: You quickly discount the results of one study that indicated that riders weren't able to reliably able to discern wheel stiffness quality. That study implied that riders had a probability of about 50% of "choosing" correctly. This suggests that riders couldn't with any accuracy ascribe performance benefits to a wheel, further suggesting that there may be no correlation (Uhm, correlation in the statistical sense. Again, look it up.) between wheel stiffness and performance gain/benefit. Fifth: One point on a curve? Well, FYI, you can't fit a curve to one point. You can fit an infinite number of curves, but not one. Your math skills appear to be exceedingly weak. I did not draw a determination from "one point." You clearly don't understand the whole scientific method thing. Sixth: Increased wheel stiffness has it's greatest effect entering corners under braking and exiting corners under power. It helps to maintain steering precision and confidence. Conversely, mid-corner increased wheel stiffness is not a bonus as the out of plane force inputs to the wheel are bumps, cracks, gravel and the like. A stiff wheel bounces off those defects, while a less stiff wheel flexes more in response to said inputs and better maintains its line. So, Professor, please tell me then which one is better and please justify your answer. Alas, your presentation, as do all of your presentations, relies only on font trickery. Otherwise you've proven nothing, nor have you even shown that understand what you're talking about. |
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