Re: Petential Energy doing Work

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Sujet : Re: Petential Energy doing Work
De : slocombjb (at) *nospam* gmail.com (John B.)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.tech
Date : 30. Jun 2024, 02:38:55
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <gr918j5amrar6gd32si4et6s3i317mrr7p@4ax.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : ForteAgent/7.10.32.1212
On Sat, 29 Jun 2024 23:26:05 GMT, Tom Kunich <cyclintom@yahoo.com>
wrote:

On Sat Jun 29 15:45:47 2024 Frank Krygowski  wrote:
On 6/29/2024 3:06 PM, Tom Kunich wrote:
On Fri Jun 28 21:59:35 2024 Frank Krygowski  wrote:
On 6/28/2024 8:05 PM, Tom Kunich wrote:
On Fri Jun 28 16:16:09 2024 Frank Krygowski  wrote:
On 6/28/2024 2:22 PM, Tom Kunich wrote:
Using Pogacar as an example let's say that normal upright riding puts his CG 1.5 meters abovr the ground. Simple Triganometry will tell us that the CG at 45 degrees lean is .707 that of his uptight position. (I have seen him lean more thn 45 degrees.) This makes a change in potential energy of 1.5 m x 0.707 = 1.06 m. Or about a change in CG of 0.44 meters.
>
As an estimation, Pogacar and bike weigh 166 lbs or 75 kg. The change in potential energy from upright to a 45 degree lean for a corner is 1100 joules upright and 780 leaned over or a change in energy in the bike structure of 320 joules, or if you prefer, watts. In a frictionless world this would cause the bicycle to accelerate as it leaned. But this is not a frictionless world and what happens is that much of this 320 watts is pushed into the tires and absorbed by the friction in the tires resisting the centrifugal force and holding the tires to the ground.
>
The physics are clear and well understood even though there seems to be quite a bit of misunderstanding on the group. Andrew thinks that the change has something to do with the CG to the tire's contact patch. That is not the change in energy but the direction of the force resisting the cenptrifugal forces.
>
Since a rather hefty 320 watts are added to the energy simply by lowering the CG in a gravity field you can more understand why a bike in a turn may seem to slide out from under a rider so rapidly. Once the tires break traction there is no counter action against the increased energy. This should also give you a much greater appreciation of just how much traction to spare the sides of the best tires have over the use of it while upright and not braking.
>
Now to be correct we have to remember that in order to be able to corner at 45 degrees, you have to be going at such a speed that on flat ground you would be pouring 700 or 800 watts into the pedals and so the addition at this speed is some 40% of a small number since very little energy is absorbed into the tires if you are not accelerating or braking. But the tires absorb is all resisting the centrifugal forces. Under normal contitions the upright bike's tires only absorb a significant amount of energy while accelerating or braking. And pro-level riders can and do commonly apply 1400 or more watts into acceleration.
>
And since you are forced to stop pedalling at that angle of lean, the 700 or 800 watts are reduced to the 320 which are added through the change in potential energy.
>
Have fun thinking about that.
>
That's absolute nonsense.
>
Try coasting at a fairly high speed on a flat, smooth surface, maybe a
parking lot. Watch your speedometer as you lean into a sharp curve. You
don't increase in speed while in the curve due to any loss in potential
energy.
>
Watch your speedometer again as you exit that curve and go straight. You
will not find a significant decrease in speed. That indicates that it's
wrong to think the tires were "absorbing" the change in potential energy.
>
And anyone who thinks Joules are the same as Watts ("320 joules, or if
you prefer, watts") knows very, very little about physics.
>
--
- Frank Krygowski
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>
It's nice to know that you cannot understand English but then I didn't expect you to know anything about bicycles since you're still stuck in the era with wheels with loose balls and high friction and downtube shifters with a 7 speed freewheel.
>
That's kind of funny! You're wrong on all three counts!
>
But your overall point is classic Kunich: You made a fool of yourself
talking about physics, so you try to insult someone else's bikes.
>
--
- Frank Krygowski
>
 
 
 
 
It isn't surprising that you cannot understand the simple physics whish even has the potential energy gains or loses calculators all over the internet from almost every college. But you as a helpless ass don't even bother to look it up and tell us all we're wrong because your own education is lacking.
 
:-) My degrees in engineering are lacking? Even my high school education
is lacking? Says a guy who has none of that education?  That's funny!
 
Come on, Tom, do a demonstration. Have your wife film you standing tall
while track standing, then magically zooming off without pedaling by
sitting down on the saddle. You know, so your potential energy converts
to kinetic energy!
 
BTW, there was for a brief time a bicycle that put such an effect to
use. The Ingo-bike had no pedals, and was more like a scooter than a
bicycle. Its eccentric wheel enabled it to be propelled - rather
inefficiently - by bounding up and down in sync with the wheel rotation.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eccentric-hub_scooter
 
or videos like https://youtu.be/EHlWS-dYvqE?t=13
 
I rode one very briefly at a museum.
 
--
- Frank Krygowski
 
>
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Thank God that I didn't have an education like you. I could be living off of the income of a college which is on the verge of collapse (Youngstown is spending $17 million a year which represents the attendance of more than 400 students completing a 4 year degree) instead of having investments worth 1.2 million now and accomplished something with my life instead of pretending.


Doing something with my life... Hmm.
Claims to have millions but lives in a cheap house in what he
describes as a slum... drives an old "clapped out car" and fixes old
junk bicycles primarily by asking Mr. Andrew "WHAT DO I DO".


 
--
Cheers,

John B.


Date Sujet#  Auteur
28 Jun 24 * Re: Petential Energy doing Work32Frank Krygowski
29 Jun 24 `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work31Frank Krygowski
29 Jun 24  `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work30Frank Krygowski
30 Jun 24   +* Re: Petential Energy doing Work15John B.
30 Jun 24   i+* Re: Petential Energy doing Work11AMuzi
1 Jul 24   ii+* Re: Petential Energy doing Work7Frank Krygowski
1 Jul 24   iii`* Re: Petential Energy doing Work6Frank Krygowski
15 Jul 24   iii +* Re: Petential Energy doing Work2Frank Krygowski
16 Jul 24   iii i`- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Jeff Liebermann
15 Jul 24   iii `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work3Jeff Liebermann
16 Jul 24   iii  `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work2Frank Krygowski
16 Jul 24   iii   `- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Jeff Liebermann
1 Jul 24   ii+- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Frank Krygowski
1 Jul 24   ii+- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1John B.
2 Jul 24   ii`- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Zen Cycle
1 Jul 24   i`* Re: Petential Energy doing Work3John B.
2 Jul 24   i `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work2John B.
14 Jul 24   i  `- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1John B.
30 Jun 24   `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work14Jeff Liebermann
30 Jun 24    +* Re: Petential Energy doing Work10John B.
30 Jun 24    i+* Re: Petential Energy doing Work6Catrike Ryder
30 Jun 24    ii+* Re: Petential Energy doing Work2Catrike Ryder
30 Jun 24    iii`- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Catrike Ryder
1 Jul 24    ii`* Re: Petential Energy doing Work3John B.
2 Jul 24    ii `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work2John B.
14 Jul 24    ii  `- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1John B.
1 Jul 24    i`* Re: Petential Energy doing Work3John B.
2 Jul 24    i `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work2Zen Cycle
14 Jul 24    i  `- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1John B.
30 Jun 24    `* Re: Petential Energy doing Work3Jeff Liebermann
30 Jun 24     +- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Jeff Liebermann
2 Jul 24     `- Re: Petential Energy doing Work1Jeff Liebermann

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