home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.bicycles.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sunic!ericom!eos92!etxorst
- From: etxorst@eos.ericsson.se (Torsten Lif)
- Subject: Re: Recumbents
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.084737.5144@ericsson.se>
- Sender: news@ericsson.se
- Nntp-Posting-Host: eos92.ericsson.se
- Reply-To: etxorst@eos.ericsson.se
- Organization: Ericsson Telecom AB
- References: <cma851.727585632@huxley>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 08:47:37 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
- In article 727585632@huxley, cma851@huxley.anu.edu.au (Brenton LeMesurier) writes:
- > There is a confusion here between force and work: since
- >
- >work= force times "speed component in the direction of the force",
- >
- >the legs can generate the force necessary to hold the body up against
- >gravity without doing any mechanical work.
- >
- > Further they do it with very little use of metabolic energy. This
- >can be seen with a simple (thought) experiment: sit down for a while,
- >monitoring you pulse and breathing rate, and then do the same after
- >standing for a while. They will of course show that it takes very
- >little extra exertion to support you weight standing (as on a diamond
- >frame, sometimes) than sitting (as on a recumbent).
-
- Beware of armchair physics. There is a world of difference between the
- concept of "work" as defined by school physics and the dynamics of
- actually *riding* a bike. Your example is flawed because it relied on
- the support of rigid structures. The chair in one case and your locked
- knees in the other. It takes very little muscular force to keep your
- knees straight and this is why you can stand up with little effort. But
- try this for a change: Remain in the "sitting" position you had on the
- chair but remove the chair so that you now have to support your weight
- with your muscles only (knees at 90 degrees). Let's see how many
- seconds of statich work you can do. If you're embarrassed by doing
- gymnastics in front of your screen you can try a simpler one. Raise
- your right arm to a straight horizontal and keep it extended at right
- angles to your body. Don't move it up or down, don't flex your fingers.
- Just keep it absolutely still and enjoy the sensation of lactic acid
- building up in your muscles. How many minutes can you do? Remember,
- it's not moving so you're not doing any work. So how come you feel
- tired?
-
- >Brenton LeMesurier
- >Department of Mathematics, Australian National University
- >GPO Box 4 Canberra 2601 Australia
- >Email: B.LeMesurier@anu.edu.au Phone: (61) 6-249-3829 FAX: -5549
-
- ---
- Torsten Lif | Big cars are a Freudian
- Ericsson Telecom AB, EO/ETX/TX/AD | compensation for their drivers
- S-126 25 STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN | own perceived inadequacy.
- Tel: +46 8 719 4881 |
-
-