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Thread: Thick Air??

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by hondacmx450
    oh you get so mad so easy calm down and here have a ice cream you better now good
    you find at 50 kph the wind going over the top of your bike is going faster than the air going under your bike more to think about
    Is it Rum & Rasin icecream? My mom said never to accept "gifts" from strangers... and your stranger than most... p/t

    But seriously... I think I've explained it wrong...

    *hardly ever rides at 50km*

    It's not the normal air force you feel when riding... it doesn't matter whether your going 20km/ph or 240km/ph.

    It's actually weirder (is that a word?) to ride in the "thick air" then it is to ride in the wind... it feels totally different (and different to the normal pressure caused by riding at different speeds too).

    I've tried explaining it... but obviously I'm not wording it right lol...

    Oh well...
    I'm not a complete idiot... some pieces are missing

    Quote Originally Posted by DingDong
    "Hi... I rang about the cats you have for sale..."..... "oh... you have children.... how much for the children?"

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  2. #17
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    I struck some "thick air" last night.
    Musta been the broccoli.
    Speed doesn't kill people.
    Stupidity kills people.

  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by placidfemme
    Um... ok let me re-word that...

    I know what it feels like to have "normal" air pressure against you because your moving (so obviously there is wind pressure). But I'm talking more than "normal" air pressure... it feels like your riding against the wind, so there is extra force against your body/bike (maybe a better way to explain it... going 50km with no wind but the pressure on you feels like your either (a) riding head on into wind or (b) riding at say... 90km

    *wishes I had put on weight*
    Can't be naffed reading the whole thread but at the risk somebody has already said this:

    It only takes a minute amount of head or tail wind to make a hell a lot of difference to the amount of 'wind pressure' you feel. Physics boys might be able to explain it better.

    Next time you are riding into a mild head wind take the time to turn around and ride the other way for a km or so, you'll be amazed how much difference that little breeze makes.
    Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........
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  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Beemer
    When it is warmer the air is less dense so you move through it easier - if it is damp or cool, the air is 'heavier' if that makes sense!
    Yes it does! Temperature and humidity come into it. Cool air with a high moisture content feels 'thicker' ie when it is near dewpoint and close to turning into fog. Even when fairly dry, cool air can be percieved as thicker....something to do with the our bodies sense it
    Experience......something you get just after you needed it

  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by sels1
    Yes it does! Temperature and humidity come into it. Cool air with a high moisture content feels 'thicker' ie when it is near dewpoint and close to turning into fog. Even when fairly dry, cool air can be percieved as thicker....something to do with the our bodies sense it
    Sweet thats the kind of answer I was looking for...

    *knew I wasn't crazy... well not completely anyway*
    I'm not a complete idiot... some pieces are missing

    Quote Originally Posted by DingDong
    "Hi... I rang about the cats you have for sale..."..... "oh... you have children.... how much for the children?"

    mucho papoosa bueno no panocha

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by scumdog
    It only takes a minute amount of head or tail wind to make a hell a lot of difference to the amount of 'wind pressure' you feel. Physics boys might be able to explain it better.

    Next time you are riding into a mild head wind take the time to turn around and ride the other way for a km or so, you'll be amazed how much difference that little breeze makes.
    Yeah - I second that. Even when it seems really still, if there's just a slight movement of the air towards you, it can make quite a diff in what you feel when you're on the bike. Really, really ocassionally it feels like I'm really battling the air and I get a sore neck and then when I stop there's pretty much no wind at all! That's what you're on about eh PF? It's amplified for me by the fact that my bike has no fairings - make a huge difference.
    liberi minutalem amant

  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Velox
    Yeah - I second that. Even when it seems really still, if there's just a slight movement of the air towards you, it can make quite a diff in what you feel when you're on the bike. Really, really ocassionally it feels like I'm really battling the air and I get a sore neck and then when I stop there's pretty much no wind at all! That's what you're on about eh PF? It's amplified for me by the fact that my bike has no fairings - make a huge difference.
    Yeah something like that... it was just something I'd been wondering about for ages... no wind but a lot of pressure... I couldn't figure it out so I thought I'd ask...
    I'm not a complete idiot... some pieces are missing

    Quote Originally Posted by DingDong
    "Hi... I rang about the cats you have for sale..."..... "oh... you have children.... how much for the children?"

    mucho papoosa bueno no panocha

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Velox
    It's amplified for me by the fact that my bike has no fairings - make a huge difference.
    From what I hear you need something to slow you down. Stops you from showing up all the bigger bikes
    "Not one day that we are here on this earth has been promised to us, so make the most of every day as if it was your last, and every breath ,as if it were the same"

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Storm
    From what I hear you need something to slow you down. Stops you from showing up all the bigger bikes
    The old Jade's not exactly a "top-end" bike! It can do around 180ish (says it can do more but I dunno about that). Just loves the revs!
    Fairings must be so useful though eh - firstly for counteracting "Thick-Air"Copyright PlacidFemme 2005 but also for keeping dry. But then again, I guess with a naked bike - your more "out in the elements" which is cool. Sometimes.
    liberi minutalem amant

  10. #25
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    I can't wait to get a bike with fairing. I don't care if it makes me look 'uncool' to NOT be out in the elements at all times, I hate having a sore neck/back/shoulders from riding into the wind (and tensing up...yes, I'm TRYING to relax...but the waterfront gusts and crosswinds in Ngauranga gorge, and and and aren't exactly relaxing on the lightest unfaired bike on the planet!).

    I'll take the faired heavy bike please...oh...and a bit more power wouldn't go amiss sometimes. I turn into a headwind and it knocks about 10k off my speed in a very short period of time. Probably couldn't STOP as fast as it decelerates! (joke, I could, if I wanted to use the breaks...I'm just being facetious!)
    It is easier to accept the message of the stars than the message of the salt desert. The stars speak of man's insignificance in the long eternity of time; the desert speaks of his insignificance right now. - Edwin Way Teale 1956

  11. #26
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    Our impression of "wind" is really an impression of gustiness. It is possble to be in a mass of air which is moving but not at all gusty. In such a case you will not readily register conditions as being "windy", because there is no variation in the wind pressure. We only notice "windy" when the air speed/pressure changes.

    If such a constant pressure is coming from behind,we just register that the bike going really well today (and bore everybody with the top speed figure we claim at the pub tomorrow). If from in front , we feel it is "struggling" , and worry about the engine packing up. If from the side we may (if we pay attention) notice that we are riding with a slight constant lean.
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

  12. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eurygnomes
    I can't wait to get a bike with fairing. I don't care if it makes me look 'uncool' to NOT be out in the elements at all times, I hate having a sore neck/back/shoulders from riding into the wind (and tensing up...yes, I'm TRYING to relax...but the waterfront gusts and crosswinds in Ngauranga gorge, and and and aren't exactly relaxing on the lightest unfaired bike on the planet!).

    I'll take the faired heavy bike please...oh...and a bit more power wouldn't go amiss sometimes. I turn into a headwind and it knocks about 10k off my speed in a very short period of time. Probably couldn't STOP as fast as it decelerates! (joke, I could, if I wanted to use the breaks...I'm just being facetious!)

    Actually, a faired bike may give you bigger aches in shoulders and back than a naked one.

    If you have your riding position correctly set on a naked bike, you will be "sitting on the wind" at your cruising speed. The wind force will nicely balance out your weight so there is no load on your arms, and no need for your back and shoulder muscles to hold your upper body up. You are literally being held up by the wind.

    With a faired bike, your upper body weight comes on your arms. No wind pressure to hold you up. If those (arms) are to be held relaxed (as they should) you must support your body weight with your shoulders and back. causing aches. BMW discovered this with their early faired bikes and more or less invented their own "sit up an beg" riding position, to take the load off the riders arms.
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

  13. #28
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    Yes it does! Temperature and humidity come into it. Cool air with a high moisture content feels 'thicker' ie when it is near dewpoint and close to turning into fog. Even when fairly dry, cool air can be percieved as thicker....something to do with the our bodies sense it
    Its because cool air is "thicker" than warm air, as warm air expands.

    cool air can hold less mositure than warm air as well,

  14. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jackrat
    Interesting avatar you have there mate,
    :
    Why yes, its a Munro IM146 Mk IV generator anemometer with syncronous magslip windvane and was used by Meteorological Services worldwide until the advent of electronic systems. Still a lot in use. Installing/calibrating/maintaining them is one of my tasks at work.
    Experience......something you get just after you needed it

  15. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jackrat
    An I'd bet you know about inversions and catabatics as well aye.
    yes, "I've done a course in that "
    Experience......something you get just after you needed it

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