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• #2252
Luis Herrera?
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• #2253
considering 52-16 on my new bike or is this a bad idea?
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• #2254
Too high for the street for most people. What are you riding now, can't you try it out?
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• #2255
considering 52-16 on my new bike or is this a bad idea?
It's an excellent idea if you're going to average about 22mph, which means even in flat open country with no stops at junctions you'll be doing about 25mph on the level sections.
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• #2256
It's an excellent idea if you're going to average about 22mph, which means even in flat open country with no stops at junctions you'll be doing about 25mph on the level sections.
Agreed, that's much too low to go under an hour for a 25. I'd suggest a 14T sprocket would be better.
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• #2257
Depends on your preferred cadence, I've been using 53/15 this year and it didn't seem too spinny at 23:31 for 10 miles, but I know I can also stay on top of 53/14 at that speed. OTOH, one of my friends was knocking out long 21s consistently on 53/15, while another was usually a few seconds behind me on 60/15. As I've said many times, the right gear is the one that gets you to the timekeeper in the shortest time, not the one that makes you look good in the car park.
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• #2258
Doing 53/11, but SS and with brakes and fat 20" tyres. And Tramadol.
The HHSB I'm building will be 48/17, only because of undrilled fork, so I need some reasonable amount of skid patches. Not sure if I can actually stop it - the last breakless FGFS was running 44/17.
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• #2259
Fuu! It's 97GI! That's why my knees hurt.
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• #2260
Calling Tester, calling Tester...... Do you have a mathematical formula for calculating RPM from mph by gear ratio? Initially, I'm interested in 48:18 with 21mm tyres, but if there's an adaptable formula for different ratios it would be very welcome!
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• #2262
I created a Track Gear calculator . Give it a try. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ll3sn1vwfhw8clh/Track%20Calculator%20Complete.xlsx
This is really very useful, can't remember if you can change tyre size or not, but good nonetheless.
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• #2263
I use a spreadsheet (attached), but the formula is
Speed/mph = (Chainring/Sprocket) × wheel diameter/mm × cadence/rpm × 1.171e-4
The units are the common ones, which is why the conversion factor is a funny number (including the pi).
The sheet is approximately correct for 700C tyres not too much wider than the rims they are on, it doesn't do a fully rigorous calculation of tyre rolling diameter from cross section and rim width, and it takes no account of tyre drop under load because gear roll out is measured with no load for MG gear check, the only time when that degree of precision is of interest.The science nut in my house wants the units to be m/s, m and rad/s, in which case
v = gear ratio × wheel radius × crank angular velocity
1 Attachment
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• #2264
It's all about pi(e)...
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• #2265
Bristol being a city of hills and living at the top..46 x18 is the middle way! Enough on the ups and spinning the downs. It was actually the ratio of the Buddha.
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• #2266
The quick and dirty method you can use while you're riding is that 100rpm on 100" gear is 30mph, it's pretty simple from that to work out the unknown from speed/gear/cadence if you know the other two.
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• #2267
Bristol being a city of hills and living at the top..46 x18 is the middle way! Enough on the ups and spinning the downs. It was actually the ratio of the Buddha.
not much good for skids. 47/18 or 48/19 would be much more appropriate.
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• #2268
Calling Tester, calling Tester...... Do you have a mathematical formula for calculating RPM from mph by gear ratio? Initially, I'm interested in 48:18 with 21mm tyres, but if there's an adaptable formula for different ratios it would be very welcome!
Ca. 96 rpm @20 mph
Oh, a "Bike Gears" app has all the calculations - you just move the slider.
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• #2269
Thank you Tester and EEI from the bottom of my heart, or at least the heart of my bottom! Now at last I will know how fast my legs are revolving when I reach my max speed of 35.2mph (downhill, obviously!) on 48:18, it feels like 3,000 RPM....
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• #2270
not much good for skids. 47/18 or 48/19 would be much more appropriate.
Ah but the numerical balance, I got a thing about numbers...and I'm not so bothered for skidding these days, it cost me a fortune in underpants.
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• #2271
Luis Herrera?
42/23 up mountains and stuff
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• #2272
thank you tester and eei from the bottom of my heart, or at least the heart of my bottom! Now at last i will know how fast my legs are revolving when i reach my max speed of 35.2mph (downhill, obviously!) on 48:18, it feels like 3,000 rpm....
170 rpm?
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• #2273
not much good for skids. 46/18 or 48/19 would be much more appropriate.
ftfy.
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• #2274
Still not much good for skids though Ed.
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• #2275
9 patches?
Get with the program, everyone knows 23T are too heavy. Bin it. Climb like an angel.