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Am 25.09.2024 um 16:15 schrieb Catrike Ryder:On Wed, 25 Sep 2024 15:24:29 +0200, Rolf Mantel>
<news@hartig-mantel.de> wrote:
Am 25.09.2024 um 14:46 schrieb Catrike Ryder:On Wed, 25 Sep 2024 10:57:52 GMT, Roger Merriman <roger@sarlet.com>>
wrote:
>Catrike Ryder <Soloman@old.bikers.org> wrote:>>A few weeks ago, after posting about braking, I tested the Catrike's>
brakes at 15 MPH. I stopped at about 6 feet, keeping the chain rings
off the ground.
Thats really hard to see how, youve mentioned that the trike pitches
which suggests that its weight is quite forward.
Indeed it does pitch forward. It's easy to lift the rear tire off the
road, however, the center of gravity of me on the Catrike compared to
someone on a two wheeler is much lower. LIfting the rear wheel of the
ground still requires a lot of braking force.
Pitching forward is a clear indicator that for your Cattrike (like for
most upright bike but unlike some recumben bicycles) , the limiting
factor for braking performance is the geometry rather than tires or brakes.
Any bike will lift the rear wheel given enough braking power at the
front wheel.
This assumption gave me a fractured wrist when I was 18:
Motorbikes will lock the front wheel before lifting the rear wheel.
>
Motorbikes and some recumbent bikes (where the line from the front wheel
patch to the dynamic center of gravity is shallower than 45 degrees)
will lock the front whell instead of lifting the rear wheel, enabling a
deceleration of around 1 g (but the biker will not normally be able to
handle that unless he's supported by anti-lock brakes).
Your description of pitching the Cattrike points to a deceleration of
just under 1 g.
>
*Normal bicycles* on *dry tarmac* roads will lift the rear wheel,
therefore for them the tire details are irrelevant for braking performance.
When braking on ice or wet grass, the tire details will be very
important for braking performance.
>
Rolf
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