timt
Member
This is a question for those of you with experience on the silvio 2 platform.
How slow can you ride? At what speed does it go from stable to a struggle to ride in a straight line?
Why?
Visiting relatives in the hills in SW Pennsylvania over the weekend got me thinking about climbing long grades.
If the grade is long, you slow down to a power output you can maintain. If the hill is steep enough and you can gear low enough, eventually your forward speed is too slow and you fall over. What is that speed?
You can put a 24 tooth granny ring on the Silvio 2. Coupled with a 32 tooth sprocket that gives you around 20 gear inches and a low speed around 4 or 5 mph (assuming 70-90 rpm cadence). Ignoring friction and wind, that's 130-170 watts on an 8% grade.
So you can gear for long 8% grades. The power requirement is very manageable. But will the bike stay upright?
I currently have a Rans V3. That's a long wheel base bike with 26" wheels. Below around 7 mph things get pretty wobbly. That limits me to 5-6% on long grades. I can do shorter steep hills. In the flatlands of lower Michigan this is not a big issue. But if I were to travel or tour it would limit me.
How slow can you ride? At what speed does it go from stable to a struggle to ride in a straight line?
Why?
Visiting relatives in the hills in SW Pennsylvania over the weekend got me thinking about climbing long grades.
If the grade is long, you slow down to a power output you can maintain. If the hill is steep enough and you can gear low enough, eventually your forward speed is too slow and you fall over. What is that speed?
You can put a 24 tooth granny ring on the Silvio 2. Coupled with a 32 tooth sprocket that gives you around 20 gear inches and a low speed around 4 or 5 mph (assuming 70-90 rpm cadence). Ignoring friction and wind, that's 130-170 watts on an 8% grade.
So you can gear for long 8% grades. The power requirement is very manageable. But will the bike stay upright?
I currently have a Rans V3. That's a long wheel base bike with 26" wheels. Below around 7 mph things get pretty wobbly. That limits me to 5-6% on long grades. I can do shorter steep hills. In the flatlands of lower Michigan this is not a big issue. But if I were to travel or tour it would limit me.