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#71
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
On Sep 21, 2:01*pm, Jay Beattie wrote:
On Sep 21, 12:48*pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06*pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir *wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it.. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be *~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections.. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. *It isn't easy. *It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. * I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. * It's *.4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, *.6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. *I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. *But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. *Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade.http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...ions-steepest-... Beat that. I've ridden my bike up that, too -- like these awesome climbers:http://www.flickr.com/photos/gabrielamadeus/4552473995/ -- Jay Beattie. Need I remind you this a tech group? What gearing? Knobbies or slicks? Helium in the tires? DR |
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#72
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
Jay Beattie writes:
On Sep 21, 12:48*pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06*pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir *wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be *~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. *It isn't easy. *It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. * I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. * It's *.4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, *.6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. *I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. *But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade. http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...st-street.html 100% grade is 45 degrees, the grade is the tangent. A vertical road has an infinite grade. Beat that. I've ridden my bike up that, too -- like these awesome climbers: http://www.flickr.com/photos/gabrielamadeus/4552473995/ -- Jay Beattie. -- |
#73
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
On Sep 21, 1:09*pm, DirtRoadie wrote:
On Sep 21, 2:01*pm, Jay Beattie wrote: On Sep 21, 12:48*pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06*pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir *wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be *~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. *It isn't easy. *It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. * I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37......8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. * It's *.4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, *.6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. *I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. *But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. *Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade.http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...ions-steepest-... Beat that. I've ridden my bike up that, too -- like these awesome climbers:http://www.flickr.com/photos/gabrielamadeus/4552473995/ -- Jay Beattie. Need I remind you this a tech group? What gearing? Knobbies or slicks? Helium in the tires? DR Brompton/Lyotard 23/Rockport/Brooks Brothers: http://cyclinginfo.co.uk/blog/546/bi...nships-photos/ I was climbing Elevator Street with a neighbor of mine, a NASA scientist who rides a very expensive Italian carbon fiber bike and who is quite fond of his purple Lycra bicycling outfit. He was astonished by the speed with which I could get in to my toe-clips and push the "up" button. He was also astonished by my facility with elevator buttons, and until I educated him, he was unaware of what "up" meant -- at least as it applied to elevator buttons and not rockets. I think he was afraid that by pushing "up" we would be launched in to space! He also had never seen toe clips, having been convinced by some sales person that he needed a ridiculously light and expensive bicycle with step-in racing style pedals. After climbing Elevator Street, we continued up a long hill, and my friend started having problems his "racing gears" which made it difficult for him to stay behind me. He had to push a ridiculously high gear, and as a result, he rode away from me. I saw him later that day on my way home. He was just finishing up painting his house, mowing his lawn and filing his tax return. He looked exhausted while I was still refreshed from riding at a reasonable speed with appropriate gears. -- Jay Beattie. |
#74
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
On Sep 21, 1:21*pm, Radey Shouman wrote:
Jay Beattie writes: On Sep 21, 12:48*pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06*pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir *wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be *~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. *It isn't easy. *It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. * I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. * It's *.4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, *.6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. *I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. *But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. *Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade.http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...ions-steepest-... 100% grade is 45 degrees, the grade is the tangent. *A vertical road has an infinite grade. Beat that. I've ridden my bike up that, too -- like these awesome climbers:http://www.flickr.com/photos/gabrielamadeus/4552473995/ Even better . . . an INFINITE grade! |
#75
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
On Sep 21, 3:06*pm, Jay Beattie wrote:
On Sep 21, 1:21*pm, Radey Shouman wrote: Jay Beattie writes: On Sep 21, 12:48*pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06*pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir *wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be *~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. *It isn't easy. *It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. * I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. * It's *.4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, *.6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. *I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. *But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. *Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade.http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...ions-steepest-... 100% grade is 45 degrees, the grade is the tangent. *A vertical road has an infinite grade. Beat that. I've ridden my bike up that, too -- like these awesome climbers:http://www.flickr.com/photos/gabrielamadeus/4552473995/ Even better . . . an INFINITE grade! That would sound too much like marketing hype. And besides, there ARE people who do not understand such lofty theoretical concepts. Its well over the head of many of the kindergarteners I hang out with. Better to say "greater than 1000%" so as to make your point without overwhelming the poor undereducated masses. DR |
#76
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
"Radey Shouman" wrote in message ... Jay Beattie writes: On Sep 21, 12:48 pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06 pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be ~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. It isn't easy. It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. It's .4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, .6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade. http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...st-street.html 100% grade is 45 degrees, the grade is the tangent. A vertical road has an infinite grade. Radey Shouman, I agree that the bottom pitch of this climb has an infinie grade, but what is the grade of the middle pitch? (it may require some unusual wheels to negotiate on a bicycle): http://www.chockstone.org/TechTips/Overhang3l.jpg Kerry Beat that. I've ridden my bike up that, too -- like these awesome climbers: http://www.flickr.com/photos/gabrielamadeus/4552473995/ -- Jay Beattie. -- |
#77
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
On Sep 21, 5:01*pm, "Kerry Montgomery" wrote:
"Radey Shouman" wrote in message ... Jay Beattie writes: On Sep 21, 12:48 pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06 pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be ~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. It isn't easy. It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. It's .4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, .6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. *Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade. http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...ions-steepest-.... 100% grade is 45 degrees, the grade is the tangent. *A vertical road has an infinite grade. Radey Shouman, I agree that the bottom pitch of this climb has an infinie grade, but what is the grade of the middle pitch? (it may require some unusual wheels to negotiate on a bicycle):http://www.chockstone.org/TechTips/Overhang3l.jpg Kerry I'm pretty sure that requires gearing from he http://www.abundantadventures.com/quads.html or he http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgIL6eHHgZU (Seems like the "why bother?" geeky stuff always comes from engineers) and tires from he http://robotics.eecs.berkeley.edu/~r...cko/index.html DR |
#78
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
"Kerry Montgomery" writes:
"Radey Shouman" wrote in message ... Jay Beattie writes: On Sep 21, 12:48 pm, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 18, 5:06 pm, James wrote: On 19/09/12 02:49, DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 17, 6:23 pm, Sir wrote: Noticed that Shimano makes a 29er cassette with a 36 teeth cog. Got to thinking (DANGER!, DANGER VBG ;))that the cassette with a 22 teeth chainring would give a really low low gear. Used with 26.125 MTB tires it'd be 15.9 gear inches, 3.0 Km/Hr at 40 rpm. I guess that if the tire was grippy enough you could ride up a pretty steep slop providing you could keep the front whell down on the surface. What sort of incline do you think such a low gear could climb if the rider could balance the bike? I'm not concerned with how fast the bike wouldbe going or that it might be faster to walk it. Just wondering like some people wonder how fast you could go with a certain big gear. Cheers http://www.adventuredad.com/images/070210moabsteep.jpg I'm surprised I can't find more such images, but that's just an example of a grade that appears to be ~36 /73%. And while that shows a rider descending, that is not particularly difficult to climb. Here's a climb near home, not the steepest I've been up, but what I could find in a hurry. http://app.strava.com/segments/1233430 Average grade is 18.4%, but it has less steep and more steep sections. Strava says there is a 60% section at about 0.63 km. It's a fire trail and the surface is gravel - until we have heavy rain that washes the gravel off some parts. I _can_ make it to the top without stopping. It isn't easy. It only takes a momentary loss of traction and lack of balance and your stopped. I don't make it every time. In my experience it's not so much about gearing, once the gearing is stupid low, as balance, traction and fitness. Another somewhat similar example:https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=37.3....8967&z=18&t=h This is for all practical purposes, someone's driveway, although it is a shared right of way and good bike access to National Forest land. A pretty consistent 15ish%. It's .4 mi for the maintained "driveway" portion, .6mi (1K) to the top of the steep part just past the upper "S" curves". It's a grunt but it's mostly tricky because of loose gravel. And while I have never failed to climb it, I descend it more often than I climb it since it just isn't that much fun to climb. I pity the guy that 2/3 of the way up. He's the only one who drives a vehicle on it. Maintenance is pretty much a perpetual proposition. While this is a pretty dry climate a good rainstorm wreaks havoc. And then we do have snow all winter. But we also have abundant sun and it does face almost due south. DR Dude, it's confirmed. Metro PDX (Oregon City) has the steepest street in the world -- 100% grade. http://offbeatoregon.com/H1010b_oreg...st-street.html 100% grade is 45 degrees, the grade is the tangent. A vertical road has an infinite grade. Radey Shouman, I agree that the bottom pitch of this climb has an infinie grade, but what is the grade of the middle pitch? (it may require some unusual wheels to negotiate on a bicycle): http://www.chockstone.org/TechTips/Overhang3l.jpg Kerry mu |
#79
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
John B. wrote:
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 18:56:34 -0700 (PDT), DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 20, 7:10 pm, John B. wrote: On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 08:54:11 -0700, Joe Riel wrote: Duane writes: Or maybe Jay is using a Garmin or some other device that reports the max grade as well as the average grade. The max grade feature of the Garmin doesn't seem particularly accurate. I'm not sure how accurate the altitude function is on the usual GPS. Over the past 20 years I've had various name brand GPS' on boats that read varying altitudes despite being used on something floating on the ocean. And, it might be noted, this altitude did not vary with the tides. -- Cheers, John B. Many current commercial GPS can be very accurate for elevation because they use a barometric altimeter. The downside is that it must be calibrated regularly. If it is, small elevation changes are readily and accurately measurable. If not, normal barometric fluctuations cause swings of several hundred feet in the reading. Relative readings are still good (this point is x feet higher than that point) but absolute elevation is out the window (this point is x feet in elevation) While the GPS portion of unit can also provide elevation readings, those are typically not as accurate, varying arbitrarily by perhaps 40 feet or so at any given location. And that cannot be calibrated. However the good news with those is that they are rarely off by more than that amount. So if you don't know where you are and don't knew what the barometric trend has been been, the GPS altimeter is a better bet to get a reading that is relatively close. Most of the units that include a barometric unit include a function to calibrate that from the GPS reading or even use the GPS reading to automatically make adjustments to the barometric unit over time. That's not as strange as it sounds. Are you certain that the usual GPS measures altitude from a built in barometer? I gad always understood that the GPS' measured altitude by measuring the position of several satellites. GPS works by measuring the time difference between the arrival of signals from several satellites. You need to see at least four satellites to solve for your position in x, y, z and t. Because of the relative positioning between you and the satellites (they tend to be clustered above you) the differences in time of arrival of signals are smaller for vertical movement than they are for a horizontal movement, thus a larger error in the z axis. Also, if you are considering 20 years worth of GPS use consider that for nearly half that time GPS satellites intentionally provided less than accurate information. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selecti...e_availability DR Yes. I used a GPS for navigation and am well aware that the position it indicates might not correspond exactly with your actual location. A friend's favorite anchorage in Puerta Galera, in the Philippines, showed on the chart as being ashore :-) I like my Garmin 705 telling me that I'm 70 m below sea level. |
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What incline can B ridden with ultra low 22 chwhl & 36 cog?
On Sunday, September 23, 2012 2:49:59 PM UTC-4, Ralph Barone wrote:
John B. wrote: On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 18:56:34 -0700 (PDT), DirtRoadie wrote: On Sep 20, 7:10 pm, John B. wrote: On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 08:54:11 -0700, Joe Riel wrote: Duane writes: Or maybe Jay is using a Garmin or some other device that reports the max grade as well as the average grade. The max grade feature of the Garmin doesn't seem particularly accurate. I'm not sure how accurate the altitude function is on the usual GPS. Over the past 20 years I've had various name brand GPS' on boats that read varying altitudes despite being used on something floating on the ocean. And, it might be noted, this altitude did not vary with the tides. -- Cheers, John B. Many current commercial GPS can be very accurate for elevation because they use a barometric altimeter. The downside is that it must be calibrated regularly. If it is, small elevation changes are readily and accurately measurable. If not, normal barometric fluctuations cause swings of several hundred feet in the reading. Relative readings are still good (this point is x feet higher than that point) but absolute elevation is out the window (this point is x feet in elevation) While the GPS portion of unit can also provide elevation readings, those are typically not as accurate, varying arbitrarily by perhaps 40 feet or so at any given location. And that cannot be calibrated. However the good news with those is that they are rarely off by more than that amount. So if you don't know where you are and don't knew what the barometric trend has been been, the GPS altimeter is a better bet to get a reading that is relatively close. Most of the units that include a barometric unit include a function to calibrate that from the GPS reading or even use the GPS reading to automatically make adjustments to the barometric unit over time. That's not as strange as it sounds. Are you certain that the usual GPS measures altitude from a built in barometer? I gad always understood that the GPS' measured altitude by measuring the position of several satellites. GPS works by measuring the time difference between the arrival of signals from several satellites. You need to see at least four satellites to solve for your position in x, y, z and t. Because of the relative positioning between you and the satellites (they tend to be clustered above you) the differences in time of arrival of signals are smaller for vertical movement than they are for a horizontal movement, thus a larger error in the z axis. Also, if you are considering 20 years worth of GPS use consider that for nearly half that time GPS satellites intentionally provided less than accurate information. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selecti...e_availability DR Yes. I used a GPS for navigation and am well aware that the position it indicates might not correspond exactly with your actual location. A friend's favorite anchorage in Puerta Galera, in the Philippines, showed on the chart as being ashore :-) I like my Garmin 705 telling me that I'm 70 m below sea level. Can the title of this highjacked thread be changed to GPS Systems? Seems that is what most of the replys to the original topic are now. Cheers |
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