Just came across this , amazing to see the stresses a bike and its suspension goes through in slow motion
I agree , looks Like suspension and Tyres have all been a bit under inflated to get the most extreme compression for the pics .Looks like a tendency to under inflate rear tyres
That's one helluva builder's cleavage!In anticipation for bambam's arrival and disappointment that the thread wasn't what he imagined ..
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It's actually interesting to see how the different bikes geometries and wheel bases change as they go through the suspension range.Just came across this , amazing to see the stresses a bike and its suspension goes through in slow motion
Uhhhh my head hurts WTF are you talking about zim . Ok that's enough intelligence like talking stuff now . Its a bike going bouncy ok .It's actually interesting to see how the different bikes geometries and wheel bases change as they go through the suspension range.
And REALLY interesting to see the interaction between suspension/tyres/suspension. On a lot of the clips you see the tyre compress, then the suspension compressing, then the tyre re-bounds increasing the speed of suspension compression - so the suspension compression slows due to damping. The tyre then compresses again and the suspension then continues it's compression. It's not a linear movement through the compression stroke due to the tyre and suspension both acting under compression, but the tyre having no rebound control.
In anticipation for bambam's arrival and disappointment that the thread wasn't what he imagined ..
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Horrible saddle position for a ride around town.
You should start a special thread with that. It only needs one post. "Description of the average e-biker !"the rider is a rubbery collection of flesh and bone that eludes accurate scientific description
@Zimmerframe has got it spot on.
?... I know.
A lot of that will be underinflated tyres. If the tyre resonant frequency and the spring damper resonant frequency are close to the same, the energy will resonate between them for sure which is what you're seeing here Undamped tyre energy transferring into the spring/damper is exactly how tyre energy gets dissipated. It isn't necessary for the tyre to have a damper. However, you get more damping of tyre energy if you can avoid resonance between the two... as long as you're not compromising other parameters... and remembering that the rider is a rubbery collection of flesh and bone that eludes accurate scientific description.
I wouldn't be surprised if they were all clutched. I always see that in still shots too.I could not take my eyes from how far the chain was moving about! In some it hit the floor, in others I am astonished that the chain stayed on the ring. Most of the mechs were really lively too. How many of those mechs had a clutch?
Mike you seem to have misunderstood this in every way , watch it again especially the info on set up sag setting etc they Are talking about 30%sag with rider aboard which is about normal for most of us I’ve never heard of a static (unloaded ) sag setting used on a bicycleYes!! All suspension set at the biggest Sag setting..30%...regardless of actual rider weight or frame/suspension design, derailleur in the highest gear/slackest chain......landing 2 wheels flat....no attempt to absorb the landing.....dubious claim of 30 psi plus tyre pressures. So just done to emphasise effect for the benefit of a slow mo camera and video views. Fine for a bit of fun, but as I said, it is predictable that many will interpret it as a technical review.
There's another thread that has just reactivated that would seem to fit here: Breathable waterproof shorts?That's one helluva builder's cleavage!
I wonder if there is any connection between this and the "What's this hole for?" thread
Looks like a tendency to under inflate rear tyres
Should be some criminal charges made against those riders wearing lycra....no excuse.?Just came across this , amazing to see the stresses a bike and its suspension goes through in slow motion
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