Dug this up from wiki just in case my claim of doing 45mph downhill on this in 1975 would be subject to challenge! 3 speed Sturmey Archer bog standard bike circa 1975!
Cycling speed records
The highest speed officially recorded for any human-powered vehicle (HPV) on level ground and with calm winds and without external aids (such as motor pacing and wind-blocks, but including a defined amount of gravity assist) is 144.18 km/h (89.59 mph) set in 2016 by Todd Reichert in the Eta Speedbike, a streamlined recumbent bicycle.[11] In the 1989 Race Across America, a group of HPVs crossed the United States in just 5 days.[12][13][14][15] The highest speed officially recorded for a bicycle ridden in a conventional upright position under fully faired conditions was 82.52 km/h (51.28 mph) over 200 m.[16] That record was set in 1986 by Jim Glover on a Moulton AM7 at the Human Powered Speed Championships during Expo86 World Fair in Vancouver.
Don't know how up to date those records are but 51.28mph on a Moulton AM7 in 1986 still standing unsurpassed today? Wonder what Jim Glover had for breakfast that day
Regards Neil
Last edited by NewcastleFalcon on 14 May 2018, 09:56, edited 1 time in total.
I rode this yesterday to test the off-road capabilities of my new bike...
Own Work
The bike performed marvellously on the trails, some of which are very rough
The sceneray along this ride is spectacular and takes in most of the linear parks in Milton Keynes... It spends a while meandering along the canal towpath...
You'd never know you were in a big urban town for the most part but one short section really lets you know - it skirts a very rough sink estate and passes through a very nasty part of an industrial area (aptly named Bleak Hall) before plunging back into tranquil parkland near the MK Bowl..
Well worth a ride...
Jim
Runner, cyclist, duathlete, Citroen AX fan and the CCC Citroenian 'From A to Z' Columnist...
Great day out today in North Yorkshire, loads of "classic cars", three "AA Village signs" bagged, and some lovely "places to stop off at" so plenty to contribute to the appropriate threads on the OTCL.
Now this Church must have the largest Blue-Faced Clock in the Country. The Squatness of the building exacerbates the effect. Just round the corner is the Aldborough Dairy where one of the AA Village Signs in situ is on the wall.
CitroJim wrote: 14 May 2018, 09:55
I know 45mph on a decent bike given a hill and a decent tailwind is very possible Neil
Yes, and ridiculously, they can do it without wearing any protective clothing at all. I saw a guy yesterday out on a roadie, no shirt, lycra shorts, cycling shoes with either no sock or trainer socks....
... and a helmet.
I believe that his head was empty anyway. Gravel rash would have been his biggest worry..
CitroJim wrote: 16 May 2018, 05:44
No way the good parishioners of Boroughbridge could ever forget the time with a lovely clock like that!
Does it strike and chime too?
Just noticed it Jim the clock reads roughly 20 to 3. Its miles out! It was the last call on our little trip yesterday so it must have been at least 20 to 7!. Didn't stop for the chimes but one reputed fact.....
.....the clock itself could well have the longest pendulum of any church clock in England!
The clock was made by M.Climeshaw in 1863. The Great Pendulum is 30ft. 7 ins. long. It is thought to be the longest in Great Britain. To accommodate its unusual length a pit 6 ft deep had to be made in the ground under the tower. The time of the pendulum swing is 3.04 seconds and this is practically constant. The clock keeps excellent time and is hardly affected by the variations of weather temperatures. It has been calculated that the clock has made 1800,000,000 (one thousand eight hundred million) ticks since it was installed in 1783 and is still young yet.
Regards Neil
Last edited by NewcastleFalcon on 16 May 2018, 08:51, edited 1 time in total.
NewcastleFalcon wrote: 16 May 2018, 08:15
..and a bit more on the Church Clock
aldclock.jpg
The translation!
The clock was made by M.Cumeshaw in 1863. The Great Pendulum is 30ft. 7 ins. long. It is thought to be the longest in Great Britain. To accommodate its unusual length a pit 6 ft deep had to be made in the ground under the tower. The time of the pendulum swing is 3.04 seconds and this is practically constant. The clock keeps excellent time and is hardly affected by the variations of weather temperatures. It has been calculated that the clock has made 1800,000,000 (one thousand eight hundred million) ticks since it was installed in 1783 and is still young yet.
Regards Neil
Magical! The longer the pendulum the better the timekeeping... I know that from my own longcase clocks compared to my mantle clocks... My longcase ones with their long pendulums keep excellent time and rarely need adjustment...
I can't live without ticking clocks... It's been an constant in my life since the very day I was born...
Jim
Runner, cyclist, duathlete, Citroen AX fan and the CCC Citroenian 'From A to Z' Columnist...