Wheels - lighter weight vs aero
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It's like some folks think riders in the peloton are riding in a literal vacuum with NO aerodynamic drag, rather than a slipstream with REDUCED drag. I'd name the other one, but he tends to appear if you speak his name, so....
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The old saying "An ounce off the wheels is worth a pound off the frame" or its variant "A pound off the wheels is worth ten off the frame" go way back, to the '70s by my personal knowledge, and probably back to the '20s. While the ratios can be debated, I contend that there is a physical basis for these sayings.
However I have massive respect for those old NASA engineers and scientists. They knew their maths and physics and would have laughed at this old saying because there is no real physics supporting the claim.
Last edited by PeteHski; 02-15-23 at 08:44 PM.
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If I agreed with you, then we would both be wrong.
Without the brake area, the rims can be lighter. With out the brake area, the rims can be more aero. With out the brake area, the profile can be more triangular, and everyone knows a triangle is exceptionally strong.
All most always making a machine dual purpose ends up with it not doing either thing job very well.
You should not fly into the face of common sense and logic.
Without the brake area, the rims can be lighter. With out the brake area, the rims can be more aero. With out the brake area, the profile can be more triangular, and everyone knows a triangle is exceptionally strong.
All most always making a machine dual purpose ends up with it not doing either thing job very well.
You should not fly into the face of common sense and logic.
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Make the choices that reduce the worst suffering.
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But, they're not.
Again, they're not.
And, for the hat trick, they're not.
Sorry, but reality wins.
With out the brake area, the rims can be more aero.
With out the brake area, the profile can be more triangular, and everyone knows a triangle is exceptionally strong.
You should not fly into the face of common sense and logic.
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https://www.velonews.com/gear/road-g...els/#_reg-wall
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That SwissSide article also has a neat representation of the micro speed variations during the pedal stroke. Note the swings are actually higher with lower rotational weight.

Quote: "Although the total kinetic energy of a bicycle is the sum of translational and rotational kinetic energy, rotational energy is only a tiny part of the total. Reducing rotational weight of rims, tires, and tubes saves energy only when the wheel is accelerating, and, as long as the rider doesn’t hit the brakes, he or she gets that energy back when the wheel is decelerating."
Quote: "Although the total kinetic energy of a bicycle is the sum of translational and rotational kinetic energy, rotational energy is only a tiny part of the total. Reducing rotational weight of rims, tires, and tubes saves energy only when the wheel is accelerating, and, as long as the rider doesn’t hit the brakes, he or she gets that energy back when the wheel is decelerating."
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I take it you didn't read the SwissSide article then.l
I am disagreeing with the "pick equipment that makes riding in the peloton easier" notion. That doesn't matter.
I say pick equipment, whatever it may be, that makes the climb easier. That equipment choice is dependent on the grade, and how fast you expect to go on that grade. Obviously.
That SwissSide article also has a neat representation of the micro speed variations during the pedal stroke. Note the swings are actually higher with lower rotational weight.
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Last edited by terrymorse; 02-15-23 at 08:54 PM.
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That SwissSide article also has a neat representation of the micro speed variations during the pedal stroke. Note the swings are actually higher with lower rotational weight.

Quote: "Although the total kinetic energy of a bicycle is the sum of translational and rotational kinetic energy, rotational energy is only a tiny part of the total. Reducing rotational weight of rims, tires, and tubes saves energy only when the wheel is accelerating, and, as long as the rider doesn’t hit the brakes, he or she gets that energy back when the wheel is decelerating."
Quote: "Although the total kinetic energy of a bicycle is the sum of translational and rotational kinetic energy, rotational energy is only a tiny part of the total. Reducing rotational weight of rims, tires, and tubes saves energy only when the wheel is accelerating, and, as long as the rider doesn’t hit the brakes, he or she gets that energy back when the wheel is decelerating."
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The trouble is that you're changing a lot more than just mass. Most 27" clinchers from the 70s were built cheap and durable: thick casing fabric and thick rubber coating make for lots of rolling resistance. Conversely, racing tubulars were constructed for performance, usually using thin cotton fabric, and often incorporating latex inner tubes.
Training clinchers were usually wider than racing tubulars as well, generally producing more aerodynamic drag.
(Also, even as far as mass is concerned, you're not isolating the impacts of rotational versus static. The training setups were heavier in general.)
I would argue the opposite. It's very easy to feel the gyroscopic effects of changing rotating mass, but much harder to directly feel performance. And since - in the 70s - the setups with high rotating mass were also very slow, cyclist perception developed that high gyroscopic effects = slow.
You're misunderstanding the physics. The momentum of the wheels doesn't render the 2x term meaningless, it is itself the 2x term.
Training clinchers were usually wider than racing tubulars as well, generally producing more aerodynamic drag.
(Also, even as far as mass is concerned, you're not isolating the impacts of rotational versus static. The training setups were heavier in general.)
I would argue the opposite. It's very easy to feel the gyroscopic effects of changing rotating mass, but much harder to directly feel performance. And since - in the 70s - the setups with high rotating mass were also very slow, cyclist perception developed that high gyroscopic effects = slow.
You're misunderstanding the physics. The momentum of the wheels doesn't render the 2x term meaningless, it is itself the 2x term.

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#238
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But judging by his views on aero and always writing about how keeping the wheel is the most important thing in the world, it's clear he never does any pulls. We all know that type from group rides...
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Not all riding in a peloton is easy cruising. More times than I can remember, I’ve been at the limit of my suffering ability for quite a while with my front tire within inches of the rear tire in front of me, while flying on flat ground. An extra few watts of aero savings is going to be valuable to me in that situation. If it was a race where climbing was the deciding factor, it wasn’t likely I was going to be around to compete for the win, regardless of how light my wheels were. My best opportunity to win was a sprint finish at the end of a crit or punchy road race, and I’d take the high-speed advantage of aero wheels at the cost of a bit more weight because it sharpens my best weapon.
For you, I expect that light wheels sharpen your best weapon, but (maybe) aero wheels aren’t going to make much difference for you in a bunch sprint.
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Yes, I read it.
I am disagreeing with the "pick equipment that makes riding in the peloton easier" notion. That doesn't matter.
I say pick equipment, whatever it may be, that makes the climb easier. That equipment choice is dependent on the grade, and how fast you expect to go on that grade. Obviously.
I am disagreeing with the "pick equipment that makes riding in the peloton easier" notion. That doesn't matter.
I say pick equipment, whatever it may be, that makes the climb easier. That equipment choice is dependent on the grade, and how fast you expect to go on that grade. Obviously.
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The only obvious thing is that if you saved 1 kg on the wheels and saved nothing on the frame, then you would be faster up steep hills. But not because of the reduction in rotational inertia. Simply because you saved 1 kg in total weight
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IMO, wheel choice for racing is best served by what improves your strengths, more so than what compensates for your weaknesses.
Not all riding in a peloton is easy cruising. More times than I can remember, I’ve been at the limit of my suffering ability for quite a while with my front tire within inches of the rear tire in front of me, while flying on flat ground. An extra few watts of aero savings is going to be valuable to me in that situation. If it was a race where climbing was the deciding factor, it wasn’t likely I was going to be around to compete for the win, regardless of how light my wheels were. My best opportunity to win was a sprint finish at the end of a crit or punchy road race, and I’d take the high-speed advantage of aero wheels at the cost of a bit more weight because it sharpens my best weapon.
For you, I expect that light wheels sharpen your best weapon, but (maybe) aero wheels aren’t going to make much difference for you in a bunch sprint.
Not all riding in a peloton is easy cruising. More times than I can remember, I’ve been at the limit of my suffering ability for quite a while with my front tire within inches of the rear tire in front of me, while flying on flat ground. An extra few watts of aero savings is going to be valuable to me in that situation. If it was a race where climbing was the deciding factor, it wasn’t likely I was going to be around to compete for the win, regardless of how light my wheels were. My best opportunity to win was a sprint finish at the end of a crit or punchy road race, and I’d take the high-speed advantage of aero wheels at the cost of a bit more weight because it sharpens my best weapon.
For you, I expect that light wheels sharpen your best weapon, but (maybe) aero wheels aren’t going to make much difference for you in a bunch sprint.
Typically, crank inertial load is higher on the flat than during climbs. Some hypothesize this is one of the reasons why cadence is different on flats than on climbs.
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This is the General Forum, not the racing forum, but racing isn't steady state: it's a series of punctuated equilibria, where the punctuations are crises that you either survive or you get dropped. After you get dropped, you're left behind facing a new drag regime. Mostly we analyze these things as if we were in steady state and riding by ourselves so we come up with comparisons like, "doing this saves you 20 seconds over 40 km" and most riders rightly say, "that's not important." But to a racer, we're not facing a steady state, we're facing a gauntlet of crises. A small advantage either lets you drop a competitor (so he or she faces a more perilous drag regime) or lets you hang on and sometimes rest and recover until the next crisis arises. If you get dropped, the gap can end up being way way more than 20 seconds. I'd regularly be in a different zip code when the winner crossed the line.
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There's almost no chance of me ever seeing the front end of a bunch sprint, I'm afraid.
I don't think the observation that higher inertia makes pedalling smoother was obvious to some people in this thread actually. As for muscle fatigue in this scenario, isn't it obvious that it would be less for the same overall weight? So if you saved 1 kg on the frame vs 1 kg on the wheels, you would be smoother pedalling up hills with no penalty in overall power.
A roughly analogous situation:
Is it easier to throw a heavy ball a short distance, or is it easier to throw a light ball a long distance? The answer is not obvious (not to me, at least).
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In the real world of today's wheel technology, we aren't stuck with extremes of just aero or light. We have a range choices of aero wheels that are pretty light, light wheels that are pretty aero, and varieties in between. Choose wisely.
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#246
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No, not obvious. That's getting into the physiological side of things, which is weirder and less well-understood.
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To the OP - I've seen the Eastern Shore, and it's flat as all hell. Makes me think "crosswinds". So, I'd really take that into account when thinking about aero wheels.
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So you are a know it all about ALL rims produced now. Sorry I dont believe that. If you are an engineering expert, tell us why wouldnt all 3 things I mentioned be true?
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Triangular shaped rims are not the most aero as has been shown with many tests.
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