Funny how the sensation of being on the knife's edge of performance on a 
bike, with increased vibration and increased feel of the road surface is 
processed as "faster" in the brain. 

Sensory inputs that release the fight or flight substances in the brain 
must be at play. Scientific interpretation of that is tough. A roller 
coaster purposely plays with those, a take off in an airliner is a much 
greater demonstration of physics but feels much less impressive. 

Andy Cheatham
Pittsburgh


On Tuesday, March 29, 2016 at 3:04:07 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> I don't believe that this is nearly as true as claimed. At any rate, it 
> certainly isn't my experience, which is instead ease of maintaining a given 
> cadence in given conditions in given gears. In fact, my own "sense" of 
> speed is much more tied to smoothness than vibration -- Elk Passes, Parigi 
> Roubaix, F Freds, etc feel fast in part because they *don't* vibrate.
>
> [Close parenthesis.]
>
> On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 12:27 PM, Ron Mc <bulld...@gmail.com <javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> but most riders think the feel of road vibration = speed, hence the 
>> desire to pump to max rated pressure.  I was specifically talking about two 
>> different tires but both running well below rated pressure - no vibration 
>> whatsoever and only one of them giving occasional shock - and yes, you know 
>> for sure when you're trying to chase a tandem with two healthy riders.  
>> -- 
>>
>
>
>
> -- 
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> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nouvelle Mexique,  Vereinigte Staaten
> **************************************************************************
> **************
> *The point which is the pivot of the norm is the motionless center of a 
> circumference on the contours of which all conditions, distinctions, and 
> individualities revolve. *Chuang Tzu
>
> *Stat crux dum volvitur orbis.* *(The cross stands motionless while the 
> world revolves.) *Carthusian motto
>
> *It is *we *who change; *He* remains the same.* Eckhart
>
> *Kinei hos eromenon.* (*It moves [all things] as the beloved.) *Aristotle
>
>
>

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