ultrazenith
Senior Retro Guru
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Hi all,
Having at one time (in the 90s) been an aspiring weight weenie, I have experienced the obsession with cutting down on my bike's weight as far as my budget allowed. At the time, light weight at all costs seemed to be the prevailing zeitgeist in the XC mountain biking scene, and I barely stopped to wonder what difference a saving of 1 lb would make to how fast I could ride the bike.
Consider a bike+rider combo weighing in at 80kg (70 kg rider, 10 kg bike). Saving 1 kg off the bike would reduce the total weight to 79 kg, a decrease of about 1 %. This would result in an increase in uphill speed of ~1% for a given power output from the rider, shaving about 30 seconds per hour.
Does this match others' experiences of the effect bike lightness?
Having at one time (in the 90s) been an aspiring weight weenie, I have experienced the obsession with cutting down on my bike's weight as far as my budget allowed. At the time, light weight at all costs seemed to be the prevailing zeitgeist in the XC mountain biking scene, and I barely stopped to wonder what difference a saving of 1 lb would make to how fast I could ride the bike.
Consider a bike+rider combo weighing in at 80kg (70 kg rider, 10 kg bike). Saving 1 kg off the bike would reduce the total weight to 79 kg, a decrease of about 1 %. This would result in an increase in uphill speed of ~1% for a given power output from the rider, shaving about 30 seconds per hour.
Does this match others' experiences of the effect bike lightness?