the big ring said:
Are you saying Wiggins' calves are 7cm longer than yours, or describing your body / shoulder width?
I would have thought (dividing the difference between you by two) that having your hips 3.5 cm higher would lead to a definite increase in CdA.
Do you have a pic of yourself in aero?
biketechreview had you down with an estimated CdA of 0.219
I'm saying that we are fairly similar in height, mass, and build, w/ the exception of the fact that my lower legs are rather short and Wiggins' seems rather long. I assume that accounts for much of our difference in height.
I'm also saying that, when racing under UCI rules and on courses similar to that used for the Olympic TT, my
effective CdA is typically ~0.20 m^2. (Note that that is w/o the benefit of a lead motorcycle.)
For Wiggins'
effective CdA to be ~0.21 m^2 under the conditions he raced is not unbelievable (e.g., Millar's
effective CdA from one of the Tour TTs a few years ago worked out to an even lower value).
Some English TTers of similar size have calculated
effective CdAs for themselves of ~0.18 m^2, due to the benefit they derive from passing traffic on dual carriageway courses.
Smaller track cyclists can have
effective CdA values as low as 0.16 m^2.
EDIT: Here are my still wind (i.e., 0 deg of yaw) CdA values when riding a Cervelo P3C:
12.5 cm drop, saddle all the way back: 0.212 m^2
16.5 cm drop, saddle 5 cm behind b.b.: 0.224 m^2
20.5 cm drop, saddle 5 cm behind b.b.: 0.207 m^2
24.5 cm drop, saddle 5 cm behind b.b.: 0.205 m^2
Since I "sail" quite well, my
effective CdA in breezy TTs is typically ~0.01 m^2 lower than I get when performing carefully-controlled field tests under dead-calm conditions.
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