It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
what's the formula for figuring out distance, given time? I think it's on this thread somewhere but can't find it!
If it's 145kmh lost in 3 seconds what's the distance and force?
Thanks!
don't worry- done it.
looks like the motogp bike was stopping at roughly 13.4ms^2 which is 1.37g!
...Full throttle till you see god, then brake.
Come on, how much then?
A post on this page has some numbers:
http://www.msgroup.org/forums/mtt/to...p?TOPIC_ID=955
The relevant bits...
Unfortunately the link he refers to is broken.This is a great link that compares a Hayabusa and a Kawi ZX-12r in a wind tunnel, here is some of their figures. The link has a graph and more details.
A lower figure means less drag, and the Hayabusa recorded a Cda of
3.37 ft2 (0.313 m2), about 8 percent less than the ZX-12R's figure of
3.67 ft2 (0.341 m2).
To achieve 187.5 mph, the Hayabusa needs 147.6 horsepower to
overcome drag alone; the 12R needs 161.3 horsepower for the
same speed. However, using the wind tunnel data, test weights,
our road-test dyno figures for horsepower and a rolling-resistance
figure, Cooper calculated that the ZX-12R would have a maximum
speed of 187.0 mph and the Hayabusa 187.7 mph. The effect of wind
can vary the result, usually decreasing speed unless it's a tailwind.
Sidewinds during a test can decrease top speed as a result of the higherdrag at yaw. This calculation doesn't include any ram-air effect, butessentially, the bikes have similar speed potential, although the Suzuki has the edge.
In order to measure the frontal area, we photographed the Hayabusa and
ZX-12R from the front, using a long lens to minimize parallax distortion,with a measuring stick beside each bike as a reference point. Later wescanned the photographs, enlarged them to an identical scale and close-cropped them. Using Adobe Photoshop, the pixels in the images wereadjusted to a scaled half-inch-square size and then counted, which gaveus an accurate measurement of the frontal area of each bike, confirmingour impressions. The ZX-12R has a frontal area of 6.09 ft2 (0.566 m2),physically larger than the Hayabusa, which is 6.01 ft2 (0.558 m2). Butthe advantage for the Suzuki is not just in frontal area. With figuresfor both drag and frontal area, it's possible to calculate the coefficientof drag, which is 0.603 for the 12R and 0.561 for the Hayabusa. The winner of this wind tunnel shootout is the Suzuki.
And then there's this from Google book search (Motorcycle Dynamics,
by Vittore Cossalter):
http://tinyurl.com/ckp3w8
From p 75:
On p 76 there's a chart of drag vs speed for various values of CdA. Taking CdA = 0.3 m2 ("super bike" motorcycles with rider prone) the drag at 200 km/h is ~ 600 N. If we assume a bike + rider weight of 250 kg (180 kg bike + 70 kg rider), the deceleration is 2.4 m/s2 = 0.25 G.The value of the product CdA can vary from 0.18 m2 for speed record contenders that are completely faired to 0.7 m2 for motorcycles with no fairing and the rider in an erect position. A typical value for "super bike" motorcycles is 0.30 to 0.35 m2, while "Grand Prix" motorcycles reach 0.22 m2 or even smaller values. Touring and/or sporting motorcycles with a small front fairing have values around 0.4 to 0.5 m2. The change from an erect riding position to a prone riding position leads to a reduction in the value of the product CdA that varies from 5 to 20%, depending on the type of motorcycle and the rider's body structure.
PS: the power required at the back wheel to push the bike along at 200 km/h against a drag force of 600 N is 33.3 kW. This sounds about right.
nobody looks as if they will be taking my five hundy any time soon.
I thought elections were decided by angry posts on social media. - F5 Dave
id think again henry ive put up the vid .check youtube gn 60kph stop in 2 meters . prepare 2 b amazed
It doesn't sound like they used anything to simulate a rider on these bikes... Granted, on a busa or a zx12, it might not make too much difference since they have "comprehensive" fairings.
The reported Cds of 0.55-0.6 sounds plausible, considering that those two machines are about as close as we get to mass-produced streamliners.
A naked bike with a rider would be a very different kettle of fish I am sure.
It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
Arr see I knew u clever fellas would explain that in a way I could get it! nice one now I sort of get it.
I was thinking about it after I asked that qustion "Does weight matter" and wondered if the transfer of those kilos onto front wheel of GL would allow a tad more stopping thingie.
L'arte italiana cammina su due rotelle!
http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...ad.php?t=91326
Interesting how much faster you can stop in an emergency than when you "practice" emergency stopping.......
. “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis
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