Well, that isn't the question I am asking and I don't know the answer to that question. I would guess that two riders with the same horizontal back would have similar frontal area regardless of crank length and it might be possible that the shorter crank length would have a larger frontal area because the TDC leg is lower. But, the question I am asking is take that person with a flat back on 170 cranks and then see what happens when he goes to shorter cranks. In this instance his back will be "different" whether flatter or slanted head down some. This situation should lower his frontal area and, hopefully, his overall drag. So, the issue is not trying to compare two different riders but to let any single rider better understand what might possibly happen to him/her with this change.sciguy said:So let's look at this a sightly different way. Say we start with someone riding 170mm cranks with a nice horizontal back and compare their frontal area to someone riding 105mm cranks also with a nice horizontal back. Who has a larger frontal area? I think the one with the more extended raised leg will so long as each ride has a horizontal back. Now at this point you're going to pipe in that the rider with the 105mm cranks can lower their bars even farther while I would contend that unless they can see out the top of their skull this is an unridable position of any length of time. Perhaps the real question here should be what is the more important limiter in time trial position, how compacted the rider's hip angle is or their ability to use their neck to see down the road safely.
Here is the problem I am trying to solve. if everyone could ride their time-trial bike looking like Levi Leipheimer or their road bike looking like Tom Boonen this would not be a huge issue. There might still be some benefit to going lower but I suspect there won't be much. But the vast majority of bicycle racers (including other pros) don't come anywhere close to these positions and we have to ask why. I suspect it is a flexibility/power problem. Shorter cranks seem to solve this problem.
Unless one has the information as to whether it might be worthwhile trying to make this change it seems silly to try. Perhaps that is why no one has tried in the past. And, of course, to be useful one does need to actually train themselves to race in this aerodynamically improved position. The lower one is the harder it is on the neck. This may not be a big deal for a 3k track race but it is for a 5 hour Ironman or 8 day RAAM race. Therefore, each person will have to take this data and see if it will be worth the work necessary to gain this advantage for the kind of racing they do. It is similar to using PowerCranks. If you aren't interested in doing the hard work necessary to gain the advantage (assuming I demonstrate an advantage) then I suggest you don't even try (and I suggest that you prepare to get used to losing regularly to those who do make the effort).I see merit in doing wind tunnel testing on this but it will be very important to access the results in regards to whether the the positions tested can truly be ridden for significant lengths of time.
YMMV,
Hugh
