Delta V
Affects all
motorcycles, not just 'crotch rockets'
Following
are two facts:
Assuming that your speed remains constant while in a turn, you are
accelerating constantly.
Assuming you maintain the same speed in a turn as you had while
riding in a straight line, your gasoline mileage goes down.
Though
these facts do not appear to be true, they are. And if you will bear
with me through a brief bit of physics you will learn why it is
important to understand them.
Speed
does not equal velocity. Speed is merely a measure of how fast
you are moving. Velocity, however, is speed in a particular
direction. Changing either speed or direction, therefore, changes
velocity. Finally, the definition of 'acceleration' is changing
velocity.
[Changing
velocity, as any watcher of NASA activities knows, is called 'Delta
V'.]
So?
This is not some subtle play on words. There really is a significant
difference between changing speed and changing velocity.
We all
know that there is a limit to how much traction you can consume before
you break loose a tire. We know that acceleration and braking
(deceleration) eat up traction. It is important to understand that you
do not have to roll-on your throttle to be accelerating! By changing
direction you are definition-ally changing velocity (Delta V) even if
you maintain speed.
That
means you are consuming traction simply by being in a curve.
To make this crystal clear, when you apply any force to any mass you
change its velocity (i.e., you accelerate it.) When you are in a curve
you know that there is a force involved that is not there when you
travel in a straight line - centrifugal. [Actually, the new force is
centripetal. Centrifugal is only an apparent force.] Anyway, you can
feel that force, you know it doesn't come from out of nowhere, and you
know it is not 'free.' When you roll-on your throttle when traveling
in a straight line, your head is forced backwards and you experience
acceleration. In a car, if you maintain speed but travel in a circle,
your head is pushed towards the outside. (i.e., you experience
centrifugal force.) On a motorcycle, because you lean in a curve, even
if you maintain a steady speed, you feel heavier. That is, you
experience acceleration (called 'centripetal acceleration'.) If you
have Excel on your system you may wish to click this link in order to
access a model
that shows this pretty clearly.
So, now
you know that centrifugal force demonstrates acceleration.
Going
back to 'Delta V' - if you acknowledge that it takes energy to change
velocity and that changing direction IS changing velocity, then it
follows that more energy is consumed (gasoline burned) in a curve than
when riding in a straight line, even if both rides are at the same
speed.
Again,
so?
It is
not an academic insight. If you generate more energy with your engine
to maintain your speed while in a curve, then that energy MUST be
consuming traction. In other words, confirmation that you should think
twice before aggressively rolling your throttle ON or OFF while in a
curve.
[Just
for a complete understanding, and so you do not think I pulled a fast
one here, there is yet another reason why your gasoline mileage goes
down if you maintain the same speed in a curve as when you drive in a
straight line: You are riding on a part of the tire that has a smaller
diameter while in a curve. Thus, the wheel has to make more
revolutions in order to travel the same distance. That means, of
course, that the engine must turn faster in order to maintain the same
real speed. The speedometer will read high while riding in a curve.]
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