#11
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Rolling Resistence
On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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#12
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Rolling Resistence
On 8/28/2019 12:18 PM, Tom Kunich wrote:
On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. That's an odd position to take - that rolling resistance tests are invalidated by various random factors, but that your "pure feel" is bound to be correct. The only advantage I see to your "pure feel" method is this: What you think you "feel" may continue to make you happy. It's a psychological benefit, not a hard scientific one. -- - Frank Krygowski |
#13
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Rolling Resistence
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 15:46:47 UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board. -- - Frank Krygowski It'd be better to fasten weight to the bicycle because then when you switch tires everything is the same. With a rider a slight difference in position could create a more aero setup t hereby negating any change the tires might make. You want the test to be repeatable as much as possible. I often wondered too about those old tests, circa 1980s, for aerodynamic components and just how much difference the components made on a bicycle with the rider pedaling. Cheers |
#14
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Rolling Resistence
On 8/29/2019 4:03 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 15:46:47 UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board. -- - Frank Krygowski It'd be better to fasten weight to the bicycle because then when you switch tires everything is the same. With a rider a slight difference in position could create a more aero setup t hereby negating any change the tires might make. You want the test to be repeatable as much as possible. I think if the test were done at a slow enough speed, minor differences in air drag would be negligible. It would be nice, though, to have an indoor asphalt surface for the test. Climate control concerns, including wind, would be removed. I often wondered too about those old tests, circa 1980s, for aerodynamic components and just how much difference the components made on a bicycle with the rider pedaling. As I've mentioned, I used to be an aerodynamics freak. It actually started when I was a teenager interested in fast cars. It carried over to motorcycles, then to bicycles. So during the 1990s, I played around with a variety of minor aero improvements. No Shimano AX components except their flat water bottle. But over time, I tried disc spoke covers for the rear wheel (and used them in some time trials), bladed front spokes, some use of a Zzipper front fairing, handlebar bags shaped for a bit less air drag, Tailwind panniers, clip on aero bars, and a few other details. And more basic, I shunned clothing that was loose and flappy. I had fun with that for years, but only a few items seemed to make enough difference to be worthwhile. Flappy loose clothing slows a person down. The Tailwind (aero) panniers tested well when coasting alongside a friend with conventional panniers on a tour. And the aero bar is a definite help. In one issue of Bicycle Quarterly, they rented a wind tunnel and tested different tricks using a randonneur bike (not a time trial bike). That included different riding positions, as well as the presence or absence of fenders, choice of bags, etc. One major conclusion was that the Drag Coefficient of bike+rider calculated out to the same value (about 1.0 IIRC) no matter what you did. IOW, for any halfway conventional bike, you probably shouldn't worry about "streamlining" the shape of the components. Just work on lowering the frontal area. Before some people squeal: This doesn't mean a Cervelo time trial bike gives no benefit over, say, a touring bike. It just means the difference is small enough to matter only in a tightly competitive time trial. You're very unlikely to really "feel" it. -- - Frank Krygowski |
#15
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Rolling Resistence
On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 8:35:57 AM UTC-7, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 11:15:27 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Wednesday, August 28, 2019 at 12:01:12 PM UTC-7, Tosspot wrote: On 28/08/2019 17.18, Tom Kunich wrote: snip Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Nothing available here? https://www.bicyclerollingresistance.com/ I have been using that listing and as you see the Rubino has twice the rolling resistance of the Vittoria Corsa G+ tires. But can you believe that you would feel that? 7 watts when riding along easily you only use about 100 watts of power and the slower you ride the less power the tire absorbs. But the EFFECTS I saw make this doubling of rolling resistance appear to be important. When I would stop pedaling the bike would slow rapidly. So it required enough strength to continue pedaling for the entire ride. Yet the Michelin Pro4 shows about the same rolling resistance as the Rubino and it would not do this. If you stopped pedaling you couldn't detect the rather rapid slowing. I'll ride the Rubino again to see. I don't think that ANY rolling-resistance test that's performed with the tire on a steel drum is going to be all that accurate or applicable to the real world of bicycle riding. Heck, even different types/coarseness of asphalt surfaces can make a real difference in how a tire feels/behaves. I guess that the best a steel drum rolling resistance test does is tell us how a tire MIGHT perform on a REALLY SMOOTH road. Cheers It isn't that it is numerically accurate but that the ratios are accurate. That is - the comparisons between different tires. |
#16
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Rolling Resistence
On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 12:57:36 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 8/28/2019 12:18 PM, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. That's an odd position to take - that rolling resistance tests are invalidated by various random factors, but that your "pure feel" is bound to be correct. The only advantage I see to your "pure feel" method is this: What you think you "feel" may continue to make you happy. It's a psychological benefit, not a hard scientific one. -- - Frank Krygowski And I think that it is an odd position to take that you can accurately test all of the variables mechanically. Today I rode the LeMond again and discovered what the problem is - I have a more upright position on the bike and the aerodynamic drag is higher due to that. That wasn't done by testing on a drum but by feel. |
#17
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Rolling Resistence
On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 1:46:16 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 8/29/2019 4:03 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Thursday, 29 August 2019 15:46:47 UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away.. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires.. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board.. -- - Frank Krygowski It'd be better to fasten weight to the bicycle because then when you switch tires everything is the same. With a rider a slight difference in position could create a more aero setup t hereby negating any change the tires might make. You want the test to be repeatable as much as possible. I think if the test were done at a slow enough speed, minor differences in air drag would be negligible. It would be nice, though, to have an indoor asphalt surface for the test. Climate control concerns, including wind, would be removed. I often wondered too about those old tests, circa 1980s, for aerodynamic components and just how much difference the components made on a bicycle with the rider pedaling. As I've mentioned, I used to be an aerodynamics freak. It actually started when I was a teenager interested in fast cars. It carried over to motorcycles, then to bicycles. So during the 1990s, I played around with a variety of minor aero improvements. No Shimano AX components except their flat water bottle. But over time, I tried disc spoke covers for the rear wheel (and used them in some time trials), bladed front spokes, some use of a Zzipper front fairing, handlebar bags shaped for a bit less air drag, Tailwind panniers, clip on aero bars, and a few other details. And more basic, I shunned clothing that was loose and flappy. I had fun with that for years, but only a few items seemed to make enough difference to be worthwhile. Flappy loose clothing slows a person down. The Tailwind (aero) panniers tested well when coasting alongside a friend with conventional panniers on a tour. And the aero bar is a definite help. In one issue of Bicycle Quarterly, they rented a wind tunnel and tested different tricks using a randonneur bike (not a time trial bike). That included different riding positions, as well as the presence or absence of fenders, choice of bags, etc. One major conclusion was that the Drag Coefficient of bike+rider calculated out to the same value (about 1.0 IIRC) no matter what you did. IOW, for any halfway conventional bike, you probably shouldn't worry about "streamlining" the shape of the components. Just work on lowering the frontal area. Before some people squeal: This doesn't mean a Cervelo time trial bike gives no benefit over, say, a touring bike. It just means the difference is small enough to matter only in a tightly competitive time trial. You're very unlikely to really "feel" it. -- - Frank Krygowski Isn't it true that aerodynamic drag is a 3rd power factor? So even tiny differences in speed screw up your tests. There are also different factors - worn vs new tires - a worn tire is significantly wider than a new one. Rim width also changes tire shape. All in all, if you are attentive I believe that you can learn more by feel than most testing that isn't on a level of a testing laboratory. |
#18
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Rolling Resistence
On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 1:46:16 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 8/29/2019 4:03 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Thursday, 29 August 2019 15:46:47 UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away.. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires.. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board.. -- - Frank Krygowski It'd be better to fasten weight to the bicycle because then when you switch tires everything is the same. With a rider a slight difference in position could create a more aero setup t hereby negating any change the tires might make. You want the test to be repeatable as much as possible. I think if the test were done at a slow enough speed, minor differences in air drag would be negligible. It would be nice, though, to have an indoor asphalt surface for the test. Climate control concerns, including wind, would be removed. I often wondered too about those old tests, circa 1980s, for aerodynamic components and just how much difference the components made on a bicycle with the rider pedaling. As I've mentioned, I used to be an aerodynamics freak. It actually started when I was a teenager interested in fast cars. It carried over to motorcycles, then to bicycles. So during the 1990s, I played around with a variety of minor aero improvements. No Shimano AX components except their flat water bottle. But over time, I tried disc spoke covers for the rear wheel (and used them in some time trials), bladed front spokes, some use of a Zzipper front fairing, handlebar bags shaped for a bit less air drag, Tailwind panniers, clip on aero bars, and a few other details. And more basic, I shunned clothing that was loose and flappy. I had fun with that for years, but only a few items seemed to make enough difference to be worthwhile. Flappy loose clothing slows a person down. The Tailwind (aero) panniers tested well when coasting alongside a friend with conventional panniers on a tour. And the aero bar is a definite help. In one issue of Bicycle Quarterly, they rented a wind tunnel and tested different tricks using a randonneur bike (not a time trial bike). That included different riding positions, as well as the presence or absence of fenders, choice of bags, etc. One major conclusion was that the Drag Coefficient of bike+rider calculated out to the same value (about 1.0 IIRC) no matter what you did. IOW, for any halfway conventional bike, you probably shouldn't worry about "streamlining" the shape of the components. Just work on lowering the frontal area. Before some people squeal: This doesn't mean a Cervelo time trial bike gives no benefit over, say, a touring bike. It just means the difference is small enough to matter only in a tightly competitive time trial. You're very unlikely to really "feel" it. -- - Frank Krygowski No doubt testing one TT bike against another is pretty useless as well. The important factors AGAIN are frontal area and a position that doesn't have the rider squirming all around which would lose all advantage of stream-liming of anything other than the wheels. Consider - they use rim brakes on the top end TT bikes. For awhile they tried those "hidden" front wheel brakes but it was difficult to design a fork that worked for them and there was no discernable advantage over normal rim brakes. Now there is far too much sales and marketing of components so all of this new stuff is just so much wasted time and money. Electric shifting gives you what? I have used disk brakes and good V-brakes and I would take the V-brakes in an instant. It is HARD to lock a wheel with V-brakes but it is EASY with hydraulic disks. I still believe that 8 speeds was the best for most purposes. I am always shifting two or three times on my ten speed. Armstrong wanted a 9 speed so that he could carry a climbing gear to go along with his close ratio normal gears. That wasn't a bad idea for a pro - but I'm not a pro. |
#19
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Rolling Resistence
Tom Kunich wrote:
On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 1:46:16 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/29/2019 4:03 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Thursday, 29 August 2019 15:46:47 UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board. -- - Frank Krygowski It'd be better to fasten weight to the bicycle because then when you switch tires everything is the same. With a rider a slight difference in position could create a more aero setup t hereby negating any change the tires might make. You want the test to be repeatable as much as possible. I think if the test were done at a slow enough speed, minor differences in air drag would be negligible. It would be nice, though, to have an indoor asphalt surface for the test. Climate control concerns, including wind, would be removed. I often wondered too about those old tests, circa 1980s, for aerodynamic components and just how much difference the components made on a bicycle with the rider pedaling. As I've mentioned, I used to be an aerodynamics freak. It actually started when I was a teenager interested in fast cars. It carried over to motorcycles, then to bicycles. So during the 1990s, I played around with a variety of minor aero improvements. No Shimano AX components except their flat water bottle. But over time, I tried disc spoke covers for the rear wheel (and used them in some time trials), bladed front spokes, some use of a Zzipper front fairing, handlebar bags shaped for a bit less air drag, Tailwind panniers, clip on aero bars, and a few other details. And more basic, I shunned clothing that was loose and flappy. I had fun with that for years, but only a few items seemed to make enough difference to be worthwhile. Flappy loose clothing slows a person down. The Tailwind (aero) panniers tested well when coasting alongside a friend with conventional panniers on a tour. And the aero bar is a definite help. In one issue of Bicycle Quarterly, they rented a wind tunnel and tested different tricks using a randonneur bike (not a time trial bike). That included different riding positions, as well as the presence or absence of fenders, choice of bags, etc. One major conclusion was that the Drag Coefficient of bike+rider calculated out to the same value (about 1.0 IIRC) no matter what you did. IOW, for any halfway conventional bike, you probably shouldn't worry about "streamlining" the shape of the components. Just work on lowering the frontal area. Before some people squeal: This doesn't mean a Cervelo time trial bike gives no benefit over, say, a touring bike. It just means the difference is small enough to matter only in a tightly competitive time trial. You're very unlikely to really "feel" it. -- - Frank Krygowski Isn't it true that aerodynamic drag is a 3rd power factor? So even tiny differences in speed screw up your tests. There are also different factors - worn vs new tires - a worn tire is significantly wider than a new one. Rim width also changes tire shape. All in all, if you are attentive I believe that you can learn more by feel than most testing that isn't on a level of a testing laboratory. I don’t actually disagree with that. In practice, you have head winds and elevation gradients that have a much more noticeable effect than rolling resistance. Well within norms anyway. The new concept is that wider tires have less rolling resistance due to the change in the contact patch. But for me, wider tires feel muddier in the turns so I prefer my 23s. I know, not scientifically valid but I just did 100km with 500 meters and managed an average of 31km/h. We had winds in the 30s. Rolling resistance was not an issue. Cornering in some twisty descents was still noticeable. -- duane |
#20
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Rolling Resistence
On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 3:46:55 PM UTC-7, Duane wrote:
Tom Kunich wrote: On Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 1:46:16 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/29/2019 4:03 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Thursday, 29 August 2019 15:46:47 UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 8/28/2019 12:25 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 12:18:21 UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 9:22:23 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:51:20 PM UTC-4, Tom Kunich wrote: Because of several things, I ended up mounting the Vittoria Roubino Pro G+ tires on the LeMond. Sunday I did an easy 40 mile ride and I was exhausted at the end.. These tires did ride well - they smoothed out the roads quite a bit th9ugh they appeared to have a lot of rolling resistance. I couldn't figure out if it was my imagination and finally came to the conclusion that I am simply on the low side of my fitness cycle. The difference in rolling resistance is so small compared to the wind resistance that I can't see how you could possibly tell. I did a hard 40 miler today with a lot of climbing. I used the Colnago which has the Vittoria tubeless racing tires on box tubeless times. Now the Colnago is an aero bike but since this ride is mostly all climbing or very twisty downhills the aero hardly seems significant. But I did 3400 feet of climbing and the tires seemed to make a rather extraordinary difference. I DID NOT get good sleep last night so it isn't as if I recovered. I think that it would probably be a good project to make a rather off-hand experiment on types of tires and how they seem to run and ride. Both of the Vittoria racing tires - the Corsa G+ And Corsa G2 tubeless feel very good. Better than the Michelin Pro4 Endurance which is pretty good. All of these tires have good puncture resistance which is necessary around here. I think that I'll pull the Roubino Pro's off and replace them with a new set of Gatorskins I have laying around. It's been so long since I've ridden Gatorskins that I can't remember their rolling resistance.. On another set of wheels I did a couple of metrics on a set of Continental GP5000TLR tubeless tires. I wouldn't exactly call these things low rolling resistance. They have a tacky compound that screws up any directional stability the tires may have. While the bike goes exactly where you point it with the Vittoria Corsa G+ you have to watch the GP5000's closely. But in a corner the Continental is probably better. Riding these metrics I was often confronted with a decreasing radius turns. On the Vittoria's I would slow a little and complete the turn. With the Continentals I would just ride through it. My experience with the Continental tires is that you have to wear them through to the thread before throwing them out. The Vittorias are different. It didn't appear to have much wear on the tread facing but the rubber sidewalls were peeling away and that made me nervous so I threw them away. I guess I'll have to experiment to see if the non-aero LeMond is what the problem is or the rolling resistance of the tires. Seems to me if you want to get a handle on the rolling resistance of your various tires, you might find a hill with a long, gentle slope and keep track of speed results when coasting down it. I've done just a little of that. One thing it taught me was that it's harder than it seems to gauge rolling resistance just by "feel." - Frank Krygowski Rolling test aren't accurate either because humidity, pressure and wind make a far larger contribution than rolling resistance. The only practical way is either pure feel or to make a testing machine which I do not feel like doing. Take your bike and put training wheels on it. Take the bike to a long downward trending straight grade. Attach a cord to the handle bar on each side and then attach the cords to the seatpost or frame so that the handlebar can not turn. Allow the bike to start rolling on its own = no pushing it to start it. Time how long it takes to get to a certain point. Repeat within a short time with different tires, tubes and/or pressure in the tires. You need a representative load on the tires to give any validity to this test. The easiest way to arrange that load is to have a rider on board. -- - Frank Krygowski It'd be better to fasten weight to the bicycle because then when you switch tires everything is the same. With a rider a slight difference in position could create a more aero setup t hereby negating any change the tires might make. You want the test to be repeatable as much as possible. I think if the test were done at a slow enough speed, minor differences in air drag would be negligible. It would be nice, though, to have an indoor asphalt surface for the test. Climate control concerns, including wind, would be removed. I often wondered too about those old tests, circa 1980s, for aerodynamic components and just how much difference the components made on a bicycle with the rider pedaling. As I've mentioned, I used to be an aerodynamics freak. It actually started when I was a teenager interested in fast cars. It carried over to motorcycles, then to bicycles. So during the 1990s, I played around with a variety of minor aero improvements. No Shimano AX components except their flat water bottle. But over time, I tried disc spoke covers for the rear wheel (and used them in some time trials), bladed front spokes, some use of a Zzipper front fairing, handlebar bags shaped for a bit less air drag, Tailwind panniers, clip on aero bars, and a few other details. And more basic, I shunned clothing that was loose and flappy. I had fun with that for years, but only a few items seemed to make enough difference to be worthwhile. Flappy loose clothing slows a person down. The Tailwind (aero) panniers tested well when coasting alongside a friend with conventional panniers on a tour. And the aero bar is a definite help. In one issue of Bicycle Quarterly, they rented a wind tunnel and tested different tricks using a randonneur bike (not a time trial bike). That included different riding positions, as well as the presence or absence of fenders, choice of bags, etc. One major conclusion was that the Drag Coefficient of bike+rider calculated out to the same value (about 1.0 IIRC) no matter what you did. IOW, for any halfway conventional bike, you probably shouldn't worry about "streamlining" the shape of the components. Just work on lowering the frontal area. Before some people squeal: This doesn't mean a Cervelo time trial bike gives no benefit over, say, a touring bike. It just means the difference is small enough to matter only in a tightly competitive time trial. You're very unlikely to really "feel" it. -- - Frank Krygowski Isn't it true that aerodynamic drag is a 3rd power factor? So even tiny differences in speed screw up your tests. There are also different factors - worn vs new tires - a worn tire is significantly wider than a new one. Rim width also changes tire shape. All in all, if you are attentive I believe that you can learn more by feel than most testing that isn't on a level of a testing laboratory. I don’t actually disagree with that. In practice, you have head winds and elevation gradients that have a much more noticeable effect than rolling resistance. Well within norms anyway. The new concept is that wider tires have less rolling resistance due to the change in the contact patch. But for me, wider tires feel muddier in the turns so I prefer my 23s. I know, not scientifically valid but I just did 100km with 500 meters and managed an average of 31km/h. We had winds in the 30s. Rolling resistance was not an issue. Cornering in some twisty descents was still noticeable.. I believe the actual theory is that larger tires = lower pressure and hence less rattling around of the bike losing less energy to the up and down motion. |
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