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#1 |
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This morning is glorious. And given that it is glorious I thought it was
an appropriate time to take the photographs I promised James. Firstly: can you ride a bicycle with locked steering? Having tried to set this up, the answer, against my intuition, is that I think you can. My test rig involved tying taut lines from the seatpost to the handlebar ends. I wasn't able to totally lock the steering by this means and the bars could still be moved, with strength, through about one degree either way. It was hard to get started on this rig, and it felt very scarey, but once the bike got up to about 8mph freewheeling down a slight incline it was OK. I didn't try any faster than that because this was clearly not very safe, but it was a lot less hard than I'd expected. However, the bars weren't totally locked so I wouldn't call this conclusive. Second, can you ride a bike which _cannot_ counter-steer? Yes, it's easy. I tied just one handlebar so that the steering could be turned freely in one direction, but its absolute limit in the other direction was straight ahead. This rig was only slightly more difficult to ride than a normal bike. However as all course corrections were to one side and the only means of straightening up or turning the other way was bunny-hopping it wasn't easy to ride straight. Thirdly, how tight a turn can you make on a conventional bike without countersteering? On smooth tarmac with the aid of a slope I was able to make 180 degree turns within a 2 metre radius circle, but as the tarmac is still wet I wasn't able to get convincing photographs of this. In order to get photographs I went down onto the beach. The sand was soft - very far from an ideal surface - and the tightest turn radius I achieved was about 2.2 metres. Counter-steering didn't help in the least, as I suspected - I wasn't able to turn as tightly with counter-steering as without it (although I'm not saying no-one else could do better). So the challenge I pose to those who believe religiously that counter-steering is necessary is to look at the left hand track on this picture: <URL:http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/tmp/PC092760.JPG> and point to the place where you believe counter-steering happened. I've plenty more photographs if you _really_ want to make a fool of yourself. -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ;; Our modern industrial economy takes a mountain covered with trees, ;; lakes, running streams and transforms it into a mountain of junk, ;; garbage, slime pits, and debris. -- Edward Abbey |
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#2 |
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Simon Brooke wrote:
> I've plenty more photographs if you _really_ want to make a fool of > yourself. TBPH, I'm not at all interested in your research, but can you post some nice pics of the views up there. It is a particularly dull and mild winter's day down here on the English south coast (this weather pattern is interminable -- I'd even prefer rain) and I could do with some scenery. |
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#3 |
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On Wed, 15 Dec 2004 11:45:36 +0000, Simon Brooke
<simon@jasmine.org.uk> wrote: >So the challenge I pose to those who believe religiously that >counter-steering is necessary is to look at the left hand track on this >picture: <URL:http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/tmp/PC092760.JPG> and >point to the place where you believe counter-steering happened. Yebbut which wheel is which? ;-) TBH I think this is another one of those pointless arguments. Especially in my case - with an 18" tiller I'm not sure I could move the steering fast enough to countersteer anyway. Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at CHS, Puget Sound |
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#4 |
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Simon, would you mind posting or x-posting a copy of your message to
rec.bicycles.tech ? The replies are bound to be interesting and fun. ~PB |
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#5 |
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Simon Brooke wrote:
[cluelessness deleted] > So the challenge I pose to those who believe religiously that > counter-steering is necessary is to look at the left hand track on this > picture: <URL:http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/tmp/PC092760.JPG> and > point to the place where you believe counter-steering happened. Right under your nose, you dullard. Just where the rear tyre (heavy track) turns left, the lighter track (front tyre) turns briefly but clearly to the right! I'm talking about the section from where the tracks separate, until the front wheel goes over some mark in the sand (maybe a foot, hard to tell with no scale). Put a straight edge up agains the screen and it is pretty obvious. Of course the front wheel got to that separation point first, proving that this countersteering action was the source of the turn. > I've plenty more photographs if you _really_ want to make a fool of > yourself. Feel free. I suggest you use thinner tyres on a firm surface next time, I'm sure it never crossed your mind but using fat tyres on a soft surface substantially alters the situation - make the sand soft enough, and of course anyone can "balance" even a stationary bike, but that is hardly relevant to the original point. Your trick of using a beach gives yourself something like a 3" wide contact patch with sloping edges which may change the difficulty of balancing a non-steering bike from a circus trick to something within the realm of a normal cyclist. Nevertheless, the countersteer is still there. James -- If I have seen further than others, it is by treading on the toes of giants. http://www.ne.jp/asahi/julesandjames/home/ |
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#6 |
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Ok, since you went to all that trouble, I'll write a more detailed reply.
Simon Brooke wrote: > This morning is glorious. And given that it is glorious I thought it was > an appropriate time to take the photographs I promised James. > > Firstly: can you ride a bicycle with locked steering? Having tried to > set this up, the answer, against my intuition, is that I think you can. At this point, I think it should be clear that your experiment is not relevant to normal riding since one thing on which everyone agrees is that it is not generally possible to ride a normal bicycle with the steering locked straight ahead (at least by a normal rider). Possible weaknesses in your test are the residual slack in the steering (why am I writing this, you admit you could steer). You may, of course, just be extraordinarily skilled, or your choice of tyres might move the problem into the realm of the possible (leaning will move the contact patch sideqays by a bit, and a particularly stiff/knobbly tyre might give you an even greater advantage). Whatever, either you are steering or you are not riding the bike normally! An easy way to properly lock the steering is to overtighten the headset. Then even if you can turn the bars by force, they will not move in hands-off riding. For that matter, did you even ride your trussed-up bike hands off? If you were managing by balance alone rather than forcing the steering, then having your arms free would surely make it easier rather than harder. > Second, can you ride a bike which _cannot_ counter-steer? Yes, it's > easy. I tied just one handlebar so that the steering could be turned > freely in one direction, but its absolute limit in the other direction > was straight ahead. This rig was only slightly more difficult to ride > than a normal bike. However as all course corrections were to one side > and the only means of straightening up or turning the other way was > bunny-hopping it wasn't easy to ride straight. This "test" is nonsense. Such a bicycle can obviously be ridden in a gentle curve (as you found) so long as you do not overbalance to the unsteerable side. In this context, the countersteering you are doing is relative to the gentle curve, the contact patch can be steered to either side of the equilibrium position to maintain your balance. Make the curve gentle enough (or even allow yourself a degree of steer to the locked side) and it might feel like a straight line with just the odd wobble to one side. I've already dealt with the rest. James -- If I have seen further than others, it is by treading on the toes of giants. http://www.ne.jp/asahi/julesandjames/home/ |
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#7 |
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in message <32aq4hF3jikg1U1@individual.net>, Pete Biggs
('pwrinkledgrape{remove_fruit}@biggs.tc') wrote: > Simon, would you mind posting or x-posting a copy of your message to > rec.bicycles.tech ? The replies are bound to be interesting and fun. Frankly I'm bored of this, and the last thing I want to get involved in is yet another tedious religious flame war. People have the most absurd theories about how bikes work, and they don't much like real world experiments which disprove their shibboleths. But if you want to, feel free. As I say, I've plenty more photographs, and if someone has the bandwidth to host it I'm perfectly happy to shoot some movie footage. -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ;; I'll have a proper rant later, when I get the time. |
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#8 |
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in message <56c0s01sq2kug934jejsp7elmnbcfaajck@4ax.com>, Just zis Guy,
you know? ('norfolk.inspam@dev.null') wrote: > On Wed, 15 Dec 2004 11:45:36 +0000, Simon Brooke > <simon@jasmine.org.uk> wrote: > >>So the challenge I pose to those who believe religiously that >>counter-steering is necessary is to look at the left hand track on >>this picture: <URL:http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/tmp/PC092760.JPG> >>and point to the place where you believe counter-steering happened. > > Yebbut which wheel is which? ;-) > > TBH I think this is another one of those pointless arguments. > Especially in my case - with an 18" tiller I'm not sure I could move > the steering fast enough to countersteer anyway. It is. I simply get irritated by people declaiming from on high that 'the earth is flat' when ten minutes of real-world experimentation will show clearly that it is not. This reminds me of the argument on rec.bicycle.tech where I demonstrated - by posting a movie - that gyroscopic precession is not the major factor in bicycle steering, and Jobst Brandt got so tied up in his own ego that he was reduced to accusing me of faking the movie. I'm just looking forward to James saying that either (i) the bike must have been pushed with long poles or (ii) I have doctored the photographs. -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ Just as defying the law of gravity through building aircraft requires careful design and a lot of effort, so too does defying laws of economics. It seems to be a deeply ingrained aspect of humanity to forever strive to improve things, so unquestioning acceptance of a free market system seems to me to be unnatural. ;; Charles Bryant |
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#9 |
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Simon Brooke popped their head over the parapet saw what was going on
and said > So the challenge I pose to those who believe religiously that > counter-steering is necessary is to look at the left hand track on > this picture: <URL:http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/tmp/PC092760.JPG> > and point to the place where you believe counter-steering happened. Know virtualy nothing about this counter steering argument but couldn't you have cropped/reduced in size that photo. it seemed to take forever to download and I am on 1Mb someone on dial-up would surely get fed up waiting before all the pic. had downloaded -- yours S Nihil curo de ista tua stulta superstitione |
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#10 |
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On 15/12/04 12:15 pm, in article 41c02adf$0$218$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk,
"Simonb" <sbennett@YOUAREALLNETDENIZENSwiderworld.co.uk> wrote: > Simon Brooke wrote: > >> I've plenty more photographs if you _really_ want to make a fool of >> yourself. > > TBPH, I'm not at all interested in your research, but can you post some nice > pics of the views up there. It is a particularly dull and mild winter's day > down here on the English south coast (this weather pattern is > interminable -- I'd even prefer rain) and I could do with some scenery. > > how about this from Sunday morning? <URL:http://www.compbio.dundee.ac.uk/~dmamartin/small_IMG_1838.JPG> ...d |
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#11 |
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On 15/12/04 12:59 pm, in article 32aqnjF3ktgvaU1@individual.net, "James
Annan" <still_the_same_me@hotmail.com> wrote: > Your trick of using a beach gives > yourself something like a 3" wide contact patch with sloping edges which > may change the difficulty of balancing a non-steering bike from a circus > trick to something within the realm of a normal cyclist. Nevertheless, > the countersteer is still there. Umm.. he did ride it on a firm surface first but used the beach to get the tracks.. ...d |
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#12 |
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in message <32aqnjF3ktgvaU1@individual.net>, James Annan
('still_the_same_me@hotmail.com') wrote: > Simon Brooke wrote: > > [cluelessness deleted] > >> So the challenge I pose to those who believe religiously that >> counter-steering is necessary is to look at the left hand track on >> this picture: <URL:http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/tmp/PC092760.JPG> >> and point to the place where you believe counter-steering happened. > > Right under your nose, you dullard. Just where the rear tyre (heavy > track) turns left, the lighter track (front tyre) turns briefly but > clearly to the right! I'm talking about the section from where the > tracks separate, until the front wheel goes over some mark in the sand > (maybe a foot, hard to tell with no scale). Mark it on the photo, and post it on a website for everyone to see. > Put a straight edge up > agains the screen and it is pretty obvious. Of course the front wheel > got to that separation point first, proving that this countersteering > action was the source of the turn. > >> I've plenty more photographs if you _really_ want to make a fool of >> yourself. > > Feel free. I suggest you use thinner tyres on a firm surface next > time, I'm sure it never crossed your mind but using fat tyres on a > soft surface substantially alters the situation - make the sand soft > enough, and of course anyone can "balance" even a stationary bike, but > that is hardly relevant to the original point. Your trick of using a > beach gives yourself something like a 3" wide contact patch with > sloping edges which may change the difficulty of balancing a > non-steering bike from a circus trick to something within the realm of > a normal cyclist. Nevertheless, the countersteer is still there. I did the tests initially on road bike with 20mm tyres; I repeated them on the beach to get a photographable track. The width of the tyre makes not difference at all. It is, of course, substantially easier on tarmac. I can take - and post - movies if you like. The benefit of testing first and posting afterwards is you are saved the embarrassment of eating your words when you have been proved wrong. -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ to err is human, to lisp divine ;; attributed to Kim Philby, oddly enough. |
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#13 |
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"Simon Brooke" <simon@jasmine.org.uk> wrote in message news:b4t592-> > Frankly I'm bored of this, and the last thing I want to get involved in > is yet another tedious religious flame war. People have the most absurd > theories about how bikes work, and they don't much like real world > experiments which disprove their shibboleths. I've not gone to your lengths, but I find I can steer to the left at slow speed by turning my bars left, that's how I keep my body upright on slippery roads. I can also dive left at speed by moving the bars to the right. Has there been some "previous" to this debate somewhere else? It's seemed to "kick off" early doors IMHO ;-) -- Simon M. |
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#14 |
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Simon Mason wrote:
> "Simon Brooke" <simon@jasmine.org.uk> wrote in message news:b4t592-> >> Frankly I'm bored of this, and the last thing I want to get involved >> in is yet another tedious religious flame war. People have the most >> absurd theories about how bikes work, and they don't much like real >> world experiments which disprove their shibboleths. > > I've not gone to your lengths, but I find I can steer to the left at > slow speed by turning my bars left, that's how I keep my body upright > on slippery roads. Try it on dry tarmac after riding through a puddle, then examine the tyre tracks. > I can also dive left at speed by moving the bars > to the right. > > Has there been some "previous" to this debate somewhere else? A lot on rec.bicycles.tech and I think some here too. > It's > seemed to "kick off" early doors IMHO ;-) ~PB |
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#15 |
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"Simon Brooke" <simon@jasmine.org.uk> wrote in message
news:1ok592-896.ln1@gododdin.internal.jasmine.org.uk... > This morning is glorious. And given that it is glorious I thought it was > an appropriate time to take the photographs I promised James. > > Firstly: can you ride a bicycle with locked steering? Having tried to > set this up, the answer, against my intuition, is that I think you can. Ride? For how far? Even if it demonstrably _can_ be done by someone with exceptionally good balance - and at slow speed and for short distances - I don't think it changes anything about the theory of how people stay upright riding a bicycle... > > Second, can you ride a bike which _cannot_ counter-steer? But that's just part of the same question - can you balance without making minute steering adjustments to either side? Block the possibility of doing it one side only and it should certainly be easier than having it locked on both sides, but still not viable over any distance except as James suggests, by riding in what amounts to a large radius curve. > > Thirdly, how tight a turn can you make on a conventional bike without > countersteering? I must admit I've never really been able to figure out how this counter-steering point is supposed to work. I suppose I must do it instinctively because everyone says that's what you need to do to turn, but despite trying to observe how I make turns I can't see where I countersteer in most cases - it seems that I just turn the bars in the direction I want to go and 'fall' (lean) into the turn. Or maybe it's lean and turn in that order. The only time I catch myself steering away from the corner first is to either swerve around a pot hole or manhole cover, or to make the radius of the turn larger to go round it faster. Rich |
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