- Aug 4, 2011
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Just for you https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aN7HjwZI-k0Moose McKnuckles said:LaFlorecita said:Yes, I saw that, but I don't think it makes a difference? I might be wrong.Moose McKnuckles said:LaFlorecita said:On both occasions the bike rotates around the handlebars with the rear wheel touching the ground, I don't see the difference?
In the Rasmussen video, he is holding on to the handlebars.
If it doesn't make a difference why is he holding on to them? Wouldn't it be natural to run the experiment replicating the conditions that originally existed?
If I were trying to prove innocence, I'd run the exact same experiment in the exact same place.
all of this.ScienceIsCool said:Not sort of. The bike has stopped sliding and the wheel has touched the ground and then it starts accelerating! Back when this came out I did a quick model and used the kinetic energy in the wheel (assuming 70 km/hr) to see if it was possible to set the bike spinning the way it did. The answer is that there is *barely* enough energy if it's transferred at 100% efficiency. The other problem is how des the energy get transferred? The obvious is that the rear wheel makes contact with the ground. However, if it did then the maximum acceleration (i.e., jerk) would happen at the moment of contact and reduce as the wheel lost speed. The video shows the bike begin to rotate with constant acceleration...
John Swanson
sniper said:all of this.ScienceIsCool said:Not sort of. The bike has stopped sliding and the wheel has touched the ground and then it starts accelerating! Back when this came out I did a quick model and used the kinetic energy in the wheel (assuming 70 km/hr) to see if it was possible to set the bike spinning the way it did. The answer is that there is *barely* enough energy if it's transferred at 100% efficiency. The other problem is how des the energy get transferred? The obvious is that the rear wheel makes contact with the ground. However, if it did then the maximum acceleration (i.e., jerk) would happen at the moment of contact and reduce as the wheel lost speed. The video shows the bike begin to rotate with constant acceleration...
John Swanson
Even if the footage is not proof of a motor, Rasmussen's rebuttal is idiotic. Who is he kidding?
Ryder's front wheel stops spinning because of the impact. His rear wheel drags over the asphalt longer and with more impact than his front wheel. But yeah, let's ignore all that.
LaFlorecita said:
MarkvW said:Where be the supposed motor in Hesjedal's bike?
Night Rider said:MarkvW said:Where be the supposed motor in Hesjedal's bike?
There are only two possible places the motors and drive can be put, seat tube or down tube, both driving into the crank axle. If you saw and heard any of the currently manufactured units and batteries and stuff you would rofl all of these crack pots posting here. It would be so obvious if anyone were using, or trying to use a motor.
Have a look at that video Flo posted, add in the off camber that Ryder's bike slid down. Nothing more to see there.
Cookson and Circ got trolled.
D-Queued said:Just a sec here guys.
Almost ready.
Just another little adjustment or two.
Ok, there.
![]()
Now I'm ready to join this dialog again and load on all the conspiracy theory stuff you want.
Dave.
i think you got trolled by Rasmussen and that 10 year old kid.Night Rider said:MarkvW said:Where be the supposed motor in Hesjedal's bike?
There are only two possible places the motors and drive can be put, seat tube or down tube, both driving into the crank axle. If you saw and heard any of the currently manufactured units and batteries and stuff you would rofl all of these crack pots posting here. It would be so obvious if anyone were using, or trying to use a motor.
Have a look at that video Flo posted, add in the off camber that Ryder's bike slid down. Nothing more to see there.
Cookson and Circ got trolled.
wow. anybody else see that?LaFlorecita said:Where the hell do you see an acceleration in the Ryder clip. The bike spins at a pretty constant speed once Ryder unclips.
And. Ryder's front wheel is spinning.
agree the vid isn't proof of anything.red_flanders said:It is possible to accept that motorized bike technology exists and has likely been used to cheat, and at the same time, see from the video that this could happen the way it did and that RH's bike does in fact only start moving once he unclips.
Both things can be true. There is nothing convincing to me about this particular incident.
Besides, if he did have a motor, why on earth would he have it on during a downhill. There's limited battery and power for sure.
Sniper thinks the lad in the video I posted is a 10 year old.hrotha said:Who's the 10 year old boy you keep talking about?![]()
the two of you seem to be deflecting.LaFlorecita said:Sniper thinks the lad in the video I posted is a 10 year old.hrotha said:Who's the 10 year old boy you keep talking about?![]()
