#15
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Quote:
Firstly, the inertia of an engine freewheel only serves a purpose when the clutch disengages the engine, and that's because the rotational inertia of the engine is relatively low compared to its power/drag. The freewheel keeps the engine turning more smoothly when there is no load. When the clutch engages the engine, the inertia of the vehicle is so high that no freewheel is required. Secondly, an engine rotates much faster than the wheels (rear differentials are speed reducers), so the relative inertia of the engine freewheel is much higher than for the wheels. In contrast, on a bicycle, the wheels are never disengaged from the forward motion of the bicycle, and they turn slower than an engine does, so their "freewheel effect" is minimized compared to an engine freewheel. As far as climbing on a bicycle - lots of tests and studies show that what matters when climbing is total mass, not inertia, so an 88,000 bike + rider with 2,000 wheels (90,000 grams total) will climb just as fast as an 89,000 bike + rider with 1,000 gram wheels (same 90,000 grams)* *Actually, for two bikes of the same total weight, the one with the lighter wheels may actually climb slightly slower. When climbing at slow speeds in small gear ratios, speed will oscillate with pedaling power pulses. The bike with the lighter wheels will have a lower effective inertia and therefore will have slightly larger speed oscillations, resulting in slightly increased average drag, resulting in slightly slower speed. But the speed difference is in the minutia.** **So why do lighter wheels climb faster? Because we typically er don't add weight to the rest of the bike to make up for the wheel reduction of lighter wheels. Replacing heavier wheels with lighter wheels, all else being equal, will result in a lower total weight, and it is total weight that matters when climbing. If instead the non-rotating weight were reduced, it will have the same effect as a reduction in rotating weight. Last edited by Mark McM; 10-11-2024 at 12:46 PM. |
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