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Date: 03 Jul 2007 06:27:27
From: Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)
Subject: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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I saw the long chat here last fall about rolling resistance. I have a few more questions... How do small wheels relate to bike science, tire behavior and energy losses? There are increased angle of attack and increased tire squat (I think). I would think that some losses could be reduced with extra supple casing and wider tires at comparable or higher pressures. But I suppose those changes bring on their own losses? (I guess suppleness reduces energy loss but increases the contact patch... But it looks like there's still debate as to how this affects real world losses on "rough" roads---with Jan saying this is important and Jobst saying it isn't...) Probably most small wheel science would relate to 20" but Moulton 16-17" have been studied a lot, even if not used often. What happens as size goes down to the 12" wheels that some micro bikes use? Is good performance possible? Small wheels also seem to affect handling---mostly due to change of contact patch size and less pneumatic trail? A big wheel has a much longer patch, right? There might be bigger factors, of course... But frame/fork dimensions should be altered to give stability if small wheels are used, right? The small wheel question seems to relate to another tire behavior question that seemed to get overlooked last fall. I recall that the German research that was quoted mentioned a couple things that weren't discussed (buried in here: http://groups.google.com/group/rec.bicycles.tech/browse_thread/thread/e0a8bca86795ebb5/6bc6e9842c888dd5?lnk=st&q=german+research+rolling+resistance&rnum=1&hl=en#6bc6e9842c888dd5). Offhand, it seems that there's a bulge in front of and behind a contact patch and furthermore there might even be a concavity---I saw this in a graphic. These effects seem to be due to bias-ply casing wrinkling as it flattens into the contact patch. There was brief, indirect discussion of bias vs. radial casing, with the idea that bike tires are made somewhat on the bias---and so perhaps this results in the tire wrinkling mentioned? The conclusion of the German research said that radial bike tires like the handmade Rinki's would roll better in small sizes (large, too?) because they avoid this wrinkling? (In part?) At any rate, it seems that small wheels would end up with more intense bulging, etc., unless offset by other factors. Tire science...a swamp! Thanks, Jeff Potter
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Date: 09 Jul 2007 14:18:02
From: Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Jul 8, 10:00 pm, John Thompson <j...@vector.os2.dhs.org > wrote: > On 2007-07-08, Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com) <Jeff...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > One last part of the question: Does anyone know anything about the > > bulges, concavity, wrinkles that relate to the leading and trailing > > edges of the contact patch? And maybe relate to the bias-ply > > construction vs. radial? As I mentioned the German research mentions > > this stuff but no one else has ever said a word about it. > > Bicycle Quarterly did a big article on this last year. It did? I thought I had all those... Title? Issue? Thanks, JP
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Date: 08 Jul 2007 05:53:18
From: Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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One last part of the question: Does anyone know anything about the bulges, concavity, wrinkles that relate to the leading and trailing edges of the contact patch? And maybe relate to the bias-ply construction vs. radial? As I mentioned the German research mentions this stuff but no one else has ever said a word about it. Thanks, JP
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Date: 08 Jul 2007 21:00:23
From: John Thompson
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On 2007-07-08, Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com) <JeffOYB@hotmail.com > wrote: > One last part of the question: Does anyone know anything about the > bulges, concavity, wrinkles that relate to the leading and trailing > edges of the contact patch? And maybe relate to the bias-ply > construction vs. radial? As I mentioned the German research mentions > this stuff but no one else has ever said a word about it. Bicycle Quarterly did a big article on this last year. -- John (john@os2.dhs.org)
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Date: 05 Jul 2007 05:12:37
From: Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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PS: Carl, have you heard of the bulge/bump in front of the contact patch? Behind it? How about a concavity after the bulge but before the patch? --Due to bias ply? Did you see the mention of the losses in that German research from "tilting over the edge" of the bulge? ---JP
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Date: 05 Jul 2007 05:10:47
From: Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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Carl, any idea how this stuff relates to small wheels? 20"? 12"? Wide and narrow tires? Low pressure, high pressure. Thanks, JP
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Date: 05 Jul 2007 13:12:31
From:
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 05:10:47 -0700, "Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)" <JeffOYB@hotmail.com > wrote: >Carl, any idea how this stuff relates to small wheels? 20"? 12"? Wide >and narrow tires? Low pressure, high pressure. Thanks, JP Dear Jeff, Contact patches probably work the same way for any round cross-section tire. Given a wide enough range of inflation and load . . . At high pressure the dominant effect will be the ring of low-pressure contact, where the rubber is curving away from the ground. This rounder contact patch will have an absolute area smaller than simple inflation theory predicts. It will have lower rolling resistance because the sidewalls are hardly bending at all, so they waste less energy in internal friction. (Similarly, thin sidewalls are more efficient, since less material is bending.) At low pressure, the dominant effect will be the high-pressure contact at the edges, caused by the sidewalls bending enough to function as C-shaped springs. This long contact patch will have an absolute area larger than simple inflation theory predicts. The transition point depends on load, inflation, and cross section. As load increases (or inflation decreases), the angle of the sidewall meeting the ground becomes steep enough that the spring-effect becomes dominant. In real life, the practical details goof up all sorts of things. As Sheldon points out, if you have a wide tire and a thin tire at the same pressure, at least one of them is at the wrong pressure. We use thin tires on 700c rims because those rims can't handle high inflation pressures with very wide tires. A smaller rim can handle higher inflation and reduces wind drag, but it increases real-life rolling resistance in that it hits real-life road irregularities at a steeper angle, so more energy goes into bouncing the bike and rider up and down. The history of the Moulton small-wheel bicycle offers a good example of such practical trade-offs. In 1983, Moultons came with 17 inch wheels: http://www.moultoneers.net/moultam.html In 1998, the new series switched to 20 inch wheels: http://www.moultoneers.net/newnew.html The size of the rims and tires must deal with the practical problems of wind drag, rolling resistance, suspension, gearing, and availability. A very small tire and rim can reduce wind drag and theoretical rolling resistance, but it can require more suspension, special gearing, and terrible supply problems. Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 05 Jul 2007 13:15:33
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 05:10:47 -0700, "Jeff Potter (of > OutYourBackdoor.com)" <JeffOYB@hotmail.com> wrote: > >> Carl, any idea how this stuff relates to small wheels? 20"? 12"? Wide >> and narrow tires? Low pressure, high pressure. Thanks, JP > > Dear Jeff, > > Contact patches probably work the same way for any round cross-section > tire. > > Given a wide enough range of inflation and load . . . > > At high pressure the dominant effect will be the ring of low-pressure > contact, where the rubber is curving away from the ground. This > rounder contact patch will have an absolute area smaller than simple > inflation theory predicts. It will have lower rolling resistance > because the sidewalls are hardly bending at all, so they waste less > energy in internal friction. (Similarly, thin sidewalls are more > efficient, since less material is bending.) > > At low pressure, the dominant effect will be the high-pressure contact > at the edges, caused by the sidewalls bending enough to function as > C-shaped springs. This long contact patch will have an absolute area > larger than simple inflation theory predicts. > > The transition point depends on load, inflation, and cross section. As > load increases (or inflation decreases), the angle of the sidewall > meeting the ground becomes steep enough that the spring-effect becomes > dominant. > > In real life, the practical details goof up all sorts of things. > > As Sheldon points out, if you have a wide tire and a thin tire at the > same pressure, at least one of them is at the wrong pressure. We use > thin tires on 700c rims because those rims can't handle high inflation > pressures with very wide tires. > > A smaller rim can handle higher inflation and reduces wind drag, but > it increases real-life rolling resistance in that it hits real-life > road irregularities at a steeper angle, so more energy goes into > bouncing the bike and rider up and down. > > The history of the Moulton small-wheel bicycle offers a good example > of such practical trade-offs. In 1983, Moultons came with 17 inch > wheels: > > http://www.moultoneers.net/moultam.html > > In 1998, the new series switched to 20 inch wheels: > > http://www.moultoneers.net/newnew.html > > The size of the rims and tires must deal with the practical problems > of wind drag, rolling resistance, suspension, gearing, and > availability. A very small tire and rim can reduce wind drag and > theoretical rolling resistance, but it can require more suspension, > special gearing, and terrible supply problems. > > Cheers, > > Carl Fogel very informative summary.
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Date: 04 Jul 2007 08:35:43
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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Tim McNamara wrote: > > Inflation pressure is one of the most central factors > in how much the tire bulges out at the contact patch. PSI is PSI no > matter the major diameter of the wheel. The length of the tire's contact patch at a given PSI is a function of the tire's diameter-- and it seems to vary by more than the proportional change in diameter. The bigger the wheel, the lower the feasible tire pressure for any given width, and the lower the casing deflection (and thus RR losses) for any given pressure and width. I've been using 700x60 Schwalbe Big Apple slicks, and they are a revelation. I can easily run them at pressures below 30psi without bottoming or noteworthy rolling resistance. This is contrary to my experience with 26", let alone 20", tires in comparable widths. Chalo
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Date: 04 Jul 2007 09:56:13
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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In article <1183538143.979183.92480@k29g2000hsd.googlegroups.com >, Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com > wrote: > Tim McNamara wrote: > > > > Inflation pressure is one of the most central factors in how much > > the tire bulges out at the contact patch. PSI is PSI no matter the > > major diameter of the wheel. > > The length of the tire's contact patch at a given PSI is a function > of the tire's diameter-- and it seems to vary by more than the > proportional change in diameter. The bigger the wheel, the lower the > feasible tire pressure for any given width, and the lower the casing > deflection (and thus RR losses) for any given pressure and width. Interesting point. I was thinking in terms of the area of the contact patch and didn't think about it's shape. Time for Carl Fogel to break out his stamp pad and graph paper over at Fogel Labs. > I've been using 700x60 Schwalbe Big Apple slicks, and they are a > revelation. I can easily run them at pressures below 30psi without > bottoming or noteworthy rolling resistance. This is contrary to my > experience with 26", let alone 20", tires in comparable widths. A friend used the 7000 x 60 Big Apples for quite a long time and loved them. At 50 psi he seemed to have no trouble with riding centuries. It was amusing to watch the reactions of people on 700 x 23s when he turned up for rides with those huge tires. They expected him to be pushing along at 13 mph but he had no trouble rolling along at 18-20 and didn't get dropped on downhills. I don't recall riding non-knobby tires of 26" or smaller with similar width, so it would be comparing apples to oranges. I did have a Birdy folder for several years with 18" (355-28) tires and suspension. With the Schwalbe Stelvio tires, it rolled as well as any of my road bikes with 700C wheels- as far as i could tell, at least. With the stock Birdy tires, it was noticeably slower. The current owner puts it in a suitcase and takes it on business trips all over the world; he's put it to much better use than I ever did.
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Date: 04 Jul 2007 16:30:08
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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In article <timmcn-601FA7.09561304072007@news.iphouse.com >, Tim McNamara <timmcn@bitstream.net > wrote: > A friend used the 7000 x 60 Big Apples for quite a long time ^^^^^^^ It was a funny looking bike- he's really tall!
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Date: 04 Jul 2007 12:01:28
From:
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 09:56:13 -0500, Tim McNamara <timmcn@bitstream.net > wrote: >In article <1183538143.979183.92480@k29g2000hsd.googlegroups.com>, > Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Tim McNamara wrote: >> > >> > Inflation pressure is one of the most central factors in how much >> > the tire bulges out at the contact patch. PSI is PSI no matter the >> > major diameter of the wheel. >> >> The length of the tire's contact patch at a given PSI is a function >> of the tire's diameter-- and it seems to vary by more than the >> proportional change in diameter. The bigger the wheel, the lower the >> feasible tire pressure for any given width, and the lower the casing >> deflection (and thus RR losses) for any given pressure and width. > >Interesting point. I was thinking in terms of the area of the contact >patch and didn't think about it's shape. Time for Carl Fogel to break >out his stamp pad and graph paper over at Fogel Labs. [snip] Dear Tim, The contact patch area for a bicycle tire tends toward a favored size, despite inflation. Straightforward inflation theory works well for pistons in metal-walled cylinders, but not for inflated canvas-sided toroids pressed against flat, unyielding surfaces. Here's a graph, showing measured versus predicted sizes: http://i17.tinypic.com/2j3jpqc.jpg At over ~70 psi, the contact patch of a 700 x 25 becomes larger and larger than expected, instead of shrinking to suit the mistaken theory that area times inflation must equal load. At 120 psi with a 100-lb load, measured patches are 30%~35% larger than straightforward air pressure predicts. This effect at over ~70 psi is probably due to the rubber mostly curving away at the edges of the small contact patch, creating a ring of low-pressure. Most of the patch is pressing down at the inflation pressure, but the pressure fades away to zero toward the edges, creating a larger contact patch. At under ~70 psi, things reverse. The same tire's contact patch refuses to expand as much as expected. At 30~40 psi, measured contact patches are only 62%~80% as large as predicted. This effect at under ~70 psi is probably due to the rubber pressing down with extra pressure at the edges of the large contact patch, instead of the pressure fading away. The source of the force is quite obvious--at low pressures, the sidewalls are being bent visibly outward like curved leaf-springs against the air pressure that tries to keep them in more circular arcs. As Chalo says, the contact patch tends to lengthen more than it spreads. Think of the tire as a series of hoops, like rubber cheerios on a ring. With more load (or lower inflation), the tire works by squashing the original central hoop a little more so that new hoops on either side touch the ground, start to bend, and support the new load. Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 04 Jul 2007 16:40:04
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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In article <kvkn8311mdkqpqv772mo6cfi7b1b57s18a@4ax.com >, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 09:56:13 -0500, Tim McNamara > <timmcn@bitstream.net> wrote: > > >In article <1183538143.979183.92480@k29g2000hsd.googlegroups.com>, > > Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com> wrote: > > > >> Tim McNamara wrote: > >> > > >> > Inflation pressure is one of the most central factors in how > >> > much the tire bulges out at the contact patch. PSI is PSI no > >> > matter the major diameter of the wheel. > >> > >> The length of the tire's contact patch at a given PSI is a > >> function of the tire's diameter-- and it seems to vary by more > >> than the proportional change in diameter. The bigger the wheel, > >> the lower the feasible tire pressure for any given width, and the > >> lower the casing deflection (and thus RR losses) for any given > >> pressure and width. > > > >Interesting point. I was thinking in terms of the area of the > >contact patch and didn't think about it's shape. Time for Carl > >Fogel to break out his stamp pad and graph paper over at Fogel Labs. > > [snip] > > Dear Tim, > > The contact patch area for a bicycle tire tends toward a favored > size, despite inflation. Straightforward inflation theory works well > for pistons in metal-walled cylinders, but not for inflated > canvas-sided toroids pressed against flat, unyielding surfaces. > > Here's a graph, showing measured versus predicted sizes: > > http://i17.tinypic.com/2j3jpqc.jpg I remember that discussion and the attempts to explain the observed information. It's striking how well your measurement's and Tom's fit. I can't recall- were both of you using the same make/model tire? <snip > > As Chalo says, the contact patch tends to lengthen more than it > spreads. Think of the tire as a series of hoops, like rubber cheerios > on a ring. With more load (or lower inflation), the tire works by > squashing the original central hoop a little more so that new hoops > on either side touch the ground, start to bend, and support the new > load. Yes, that's a simpler and better visual than my explanation would have been.
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Date: 04 Jul 2007 16:43:04
From:
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 16:40:04 -0500, Tim McNamara <timmcn@bitstream.net > wrote: >In article <kvkn8311mdkqpqv772mo6cfi7b1b57s18a@4ax.com>, > carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > >> On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 09:56:13 -0500, Tim McNamara >> <timmcn@bitstream.net> wrote: >> >> >In article <1183538143.979183.92480@k29g2000hsd.googlegroups.com>, >> > Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com> wrote: >> > >> >> Tim McNamara wrote: >> >> > >> >> > Inflation pressure is one of the most central factors in how >> >> > much the tire bulges out at the contact patch. PSI is PSI no >> >> > matter the major diameter of the wheel. >> >> >> >> The length of the tire's contact patch at a given PSI is a >> >> function of the tire's diameter-- and it seems to vary by more >> >> than the proportional change in diameter. The bigger the wheel, >> >> the lower the feasible tire pressure for any given width, and the >> >> lower the casing deflection (and thus RR losses) for any given >> >> pressure and width. >> > >> >Interesting point. I was thinking in terms of the area of the >> >contact patch and didn't think about it's shape. Time for Carl >> >Fogel to break out his stamp pad and graph paper over at Fogel Labs. >> >> [snip] >> >> Dear Tim, >> >> The contact patch area for a bicycle tire tends toward a favored >> size, despite inflation. Straightforward inflation theory works well >> for pistons in metal-walled cylinders, but not for inflated >> canvas-sided toroids pressed against flat, unyielding surfaces. >> >> Here's a graph, showing measured versus predicted sizes: >> >> http://i17.tinypic.com/2j3jpqc.jpg > >I remember that discussion and the attempts to explain the observed >information. It's striking how well your measurement's and Tom's fit. >I can't recall- were both of you using the same make/model tire? > ><snip> > >> As Chalo says, the contact patch tends to lengthen more than it >> spreads. Think of the tire as a series of hoops, like rubber cheerios >> on a ring. With more load (or lower inflation), the tire works by >> squashing the original central hoop a little more so that new hoops >> on either side touch the ground, start to bend, and support the new >> load. > >Yes, that's a simpler and better visual than my explanation would have >been. Dear Tim, I measured a single tire, nominally 700x26 from 30 to 120 psi in 10 psi increments. Tom measured 5 tires of various widths from 60 to 120 psi in 10 psi increments. When I averaged the data points for his 5 tires, his results were ridiculously close to my single-tire data points--the blue and yellow lines on the graph pretty much match. I think that the graph of my areas at 30-40-50 psi is jagged, suggesting that more measurements would produce a smoother curve, but the general trend seemed to be clear--the tire just didn't spread out nearly as much as expected. The sidewall tension probably gives a progressive spring-style resistance. By the time the tire flattens into impact-puncture dimensions, the originally round cross-section of the tire has been enormously distorted against the resistance of the air pressure on the sidewalls. Another way to appreciate the sidewall force is to hold a tire off the ground and then imagine how hard you'd have to pull each sidewall outward to produce the same flattening at the contact patch. The tire surface is stretched taut, like a 3-D curved trampoline--bulging it in either direction takes a lot of force. At high pressures, the sidewalls bulge very little, and the very edges of the contact patch press against the ground with less than inflation pressure because the sidewall is pulling them away from the ground. But once the load is high enough (or the pressure low enough) to flatten a good deal of rubber against the ground, the tables turn, and the sidewall switches to pushing the edges down even harder than inflation pressure. Tread thickness and sidewall stiffness probably influence things a bit, but the main factor is likely to be the cross-section diameter of the unloaded tire. Given the same inflation and load . . . A very wide tire should act like the test tires at high pressure, with a shorter, rounder contact patch with low-pressure edges that's larger than pressure x area predicts. (Fewer hoops are bending.) A very thin tire should act like the test tires at low pressure, with a long contact patch with high-pressure edges that's smaller than pressure x area predicts. (More hoops are bending.) From a practical point of view, the shorter, rounder contact patch involves less rolling resistance because there's less sidewall bending. But the longer contact patch may give better traction because the pressure is greater than inflation at the edges and the longer strip _may_ bridge small slippery spots better when cornering. Here's an exaggerated comparison: same load, same inflation narrow tire, wide tire, slightly larger area slightly smaller area long, thin contact patch short, wide contact patch xxxxxxxxxxx XXXXXXX <-bridges- > <slips> ..1234567.. 1234567 <--same slippery patch Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 03 Jul 2007 20:21:42
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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In article <1183469247.274679.206010@m36g2000hse.googlegroups.com >, "Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)" <JeffOYB@hotmail.com > wrote: > I saw the long chat here last fall about rolling resistance. > > I have a few more questions... > > How do small wheels relate to bike science, tire behavior and energy > losses? There are increased angle of attack and increased tire squat > (I think). I would think that some losses could be reduced with extra > supple casing and wider tires at comparable or higher pressures. But > I suppose those changes bring on their own losses? From what I have read, Alex Moulton tested his small wheel bike against a regular bike (his own Hetchins road bike) and found that the small wheel bike was about 2% more efficient as a total package. I think you can find the particulars in one of Tony Hadland's books and there might be something on the Web about it too. Bear in mind that there were significant differences that make it difficult: hub gear versus derailleur, small wheel versus large, suspension versus none. > (I guess suppleness reduces energy loss but increases the contact > patch... But it looks like there's still debate as to how this > affects real world losses on "rough" roads---with Jan saying this is > important and Jobst saying it isn't...) I don't see any reason why a more supple tire would have an increased contact patch, all other things being equal. I also don't know that there has been much discussion of suppleness vis-a-vis rough roads. I think the disagreement between Jan and Jobst is whether measuring RR on pavement versus a steel drum would change the ordinal ranking of the tires in terms of rolling resistance. Otherwise they were pretty broadly in agreement, I thought. There were a number of questions about noise and errors of measurement in Jan's data using a roll-down test to try to determine RR, but those concerns were not unique to Jobst. > Probably most small wheel science would relate to 20" but Moulton > 16-17" have been studied a lot, even if not used often. What happens > as size goes down to the 12" wheels that some micro bikes use? Is > good performance possible? > > Small wheels also seem to affect handling---mostly due to change of > contact patch size and less pneumatic trail? A big wheel has a much > longer patch, right? There might be bigger factors, of course... But > frame/fork dimensions should be altered to give stability if small > wheels are used, right? Unfortunately it's comparing apples to oranges. Small wheel bikes often have odd steering geometries so it is difficult to estimate the effects of the wheel size. Moulton tested steering geometries empirically, having forks make with really long dropouts that allowed for quickly changing the effective fork offset and thus geometric trail. The old F frame Moultons tended to feel pretty normal, at least the few I have ridden did. I've only briefly ridden one AM series Moulton. > The small wheel question seems to relate to another tire behavior > question that seemed to get overlooked last fall. > > I recall that the German research that was quoted mentioned a couple > things that weren't discussed (buried in here: > http://groups.google.com/group/rec.bicycles.tech/browse_thread/thread/e0a8bca8 > 6795ebb5/6bc6e9842c888dd5?lnk=st&q=german+research+rolling+resistance&rnum=1&h > l=en#6bc6e9842c888dd5). > Offhand, it seems that there's a bulge in front of and behind a > contact patch and furthermore there might even be a concavity---I saw > this in a graphic. These effects seem to be due to bias-ply casing > wrinkling as it flattens into the contact patch. There was brief, > indirect discussion of bias vs. radial casing, with the idea that bike > tires are made somewhat on the bias---and so perhaps this results in > the tire wrinkling mentioned? The conclusion of the German research > said that radial bike tires like the handmade Rinki's would roll > better in small sizes (large, too?) because they avoid this wrinkling? > (In part?) This is beyond my knowledge base, hopefully someone who knows more about it will post. I recall reading that radial bike tires were tried by Michelin and that the testers did not like how the tires felt to ride, although I don't know what their objection was. > At any rate, it seems that small wheels would end up with more intense > bulging, etc., unless offset by other factors. I don't see why. Inflation pressure is one of the most central factors in how much the tire bulges out at the contact patch. PSI is PSI no matter the major diameter of the wheel. > Tire science...a swamp! > > Thanks, Jeff Potter
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Date: 03 Jul 2007 17:31:55
From: Johnny Sunset aka Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Jul 3, 8:27 am, Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com) wrote: > I saw the long chat here last fall about rolling resistance. > > I have a few more questions... > > How do small wheels relate to bike science, tire behavior and energy > losses? There are increased angle of attack and increased tire squat > (I think). I would think that some losses could be reduced with extra > supple casing and wider tires at comparable or higher pressures. But I > suppose those changes bring on their own losses? > > (I guess suppleness reduces energy loss but increases the contact > patch... But it looks like there's still debate as to how this affects > real world losses on "rough" roads---with Jan saying this is important > and Jobst saying it isn't...) > > Probably most small wheel science would relate to 20" but Moulton > 16-17" have been studied a lot, even if not used often. What happens > as size goes down to the 12" wheels that some micro bikes use? Is good > performance possible?... My experience is that I out-coast tri/TT bikes, upright tandems and even Zzipper faired Easy Racers on an ISO 305-mm (Primo Comet) / ISO 406-mm (Japanese Tioga Comp Pool) wheelset, so the rolling resistance penalty must not be too bad. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia The weather is here, wish you were beautiful
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Date: 03 Jul 2007 14:50:52
From: bfd
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Jul 3, 6:46 am, "Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)" <Jeff...@hotmail.com > wrote: > On Jul 3, 9:27 am, "Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)"<Jeff...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > [ ] > > > I recall that the German research that was quoted mentioned a couple > > things that weren't discussed (buried in here:http://groups.google.com/group/rec.bicycles.tech/browse_thread/thread...). > > Offhand, it seems that there's a bulge in front of and behind a > > contact patch and furthermore there might even be a concavity---I saw > > this in a graphic. These effects seem to be due to bias-ply casing > > wrinkling as it flattens into the contact patch. > > PS: It seems like some of the loss caused by the bulge is because it's > a "hill" that has to be rolled over---the German article translation > used the awkward term "tilting over an edge"---but I'm combining hints > from the 2 (unusual) resistances they list: "unreeling" and "pull." I > think that "unreeling" might've been corrected as "coasting." I guess the question is does any of this really make a difference? I think getting a bike that fits and making sure you are FIT make more of a difference than worrying about whether your tires or wheels have more resistance. If you're in shape, you'll go fast. If not, then the most aero bike isn't going to get you up that hill any faster!
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Date: 03 Jul 2007 06:46:07
From: Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)
Subject: Re: (Small) Tire Science? Contact Patch Wrinkles?
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On Jul 3, 9:27 am, "Jeff Potter (of OutYourBackdoor.com)" <Jeff...@hotmail.com > wrote: [ ] > I recall that the German research that was quoted mentioned a couple > things that weren't discussed (buried in here:http://groups.google.com/group/rec.bicycles.tech/browse_thread/thread...). > Offhand, it seems that there's a bulge in front of and behind a > contact patch and furthermore there might even be a concavity---I saw > this in a graphic. These effects seem to be due to bias-ply casing > wrinkling as it flattens into the contact patch. PS: It seems like some of the loss caused by the bulge is because it's a "hill" that has to be rolled over---the German article translation used the awkward term "tilting over an edge"---but I'm combining hints from the 2 (unusual) resistances they list: "unreeling" and "pull." I think that "unreeling" might've been corrected as "coasting."
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