Jeremy McCreary
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
- City
- Carlsbad, CA
I've long known that countersteering is the fastest way to drop a bike or motorcycle into a curve at speed. And that I have to countersteer the SUV to keep it from turning into every gas station it passes.
But after all these decades of biking, I still didn't know that I have to countersteer every single time I turn:
Given that we all ride without even thinking about it, the statement at the very end that there are still many things about how bikes work that science has yet to explain in simple terms is quite interesting.
In looking into this further, I learned that the complicated differential equations describing how a bike self-balances have been formulated. They can't be solved completely, but enough info can be extracted to learn (a) that bikes should indeed be able to do this (meaning that the essential physics has been captured), and (b) that the gyroscopic effect, though helpful, is totally unnecessary. This has been confirmed experimentally. (Look up physicist Andy Ruina and bikes on YouTube.)
Turns out that cycling involves many strongly coupled, highly nonlinear processes. (Translation: Everything depends on everything else, and twice the input seldom gives twice the output.) This is exactly the kind of system that the human brain is ill-equipped to understand at anything approaching a gut level.
So if you enjoy doing things that baffle others — or at least physicists — keep on riding!
But after all these decades of biking, I still didn't know that I have to countersteer every single time I turn:
Given that we all ride without even thinking about it, the statement at the very end that there are still many things about how bikes work that science has yet to explain in simple terms is quite interesting.
In looking into this further, I learned that the complicated differential equations describing how a bike self-balances have been formulated. They can't be solved completely, but enough info can be extracted to learn (a) that bikes should indeed be able to do this (meaning that the essential physics has been captured), and (b) that the gyroscopic effect, though helpful, is totally unnecessary. This has been confirmed experimentally. (Look up physicist Andy Ruina and bikes on YouTube.)
Turns out that cycling involves many strongly coupled, highly nonlinear processes. (Translation: Everything depends on everything else, and twice the input seldom gives twice the output.) This is exactly the kind of system that the human brain is ill-equipped to understand at anything approaching a gut level.
So if you enjoy doing things that baffle others — or at least physicists — keep on riding!
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