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I got a similar problem by passing through an alarm gate in a shop. But my
bike computer only reaches 99 km/h. I have to train me more to reach you 369 km/h... "John Henderson" <jhenRemoveThis@talk21.com> wrote in message news:c3qrfc$2bcfvi$1@ID-83062.news.uni-berlin.de... > I came home from my morning ride and found that my bike computer > (a VDO C10 - wired, not wireless) had registered a max speed of > exactly 369.00 kph (the C10 reads to 2 decimal places). > Normally, I see a figure in the 40's or 50's. > > I got to wondering about the cause, and thought that I might have > ridden close to a strong AC magnetic field at mains frequency. > Since the Australian mains frequency is 50 Hertz, this could have > switched the fork-mounted pickup at either 50 or 100 times per > second (depending on whether both half-cycles did the switching, > or only one - an AC electromagnet reverses polarity with each > half-cycle). Given that the computer is configured for a wheel > circumference of 2050 mm, that gives me a switching frequency of > 50 Hertz exactly (to 3 decimal places) for 369 kph. > > So I think I've found the cause, and it got switched only on > alternate mains half-cycles. Alas it wasn't a sudden, dramatic > increase in my fitness. Still, it's nice to know the C10 is > capable of registering pulses at that speed. > > John > > |
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