Cyclocommting vs. Car commuting time
#51
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 4,094
Likes: 2
From: Bozeman
Bikes: 199? Landshark Roadshark, 198? Mondonico Diamond, 1987 Panasonic DX-5000, 1987 Bianchi Limited, Univega... Chrome..., 1989 Schwinn Woodlands, Motobecane USA Record, Raleigh Tokul 2
25-30 to drive in the winter (including warming up car, scraping car, etc.)
15 to ride
SO uh.. 0.6 ratio
15 to ride
SO uh.. 0.6 ratio
#52
aka Tom Reingold




Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 44,163
Likes: 6,382
From: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA
Bikes: 1962 Rudge Sports, 1971 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Raleigh Pro Track, 1974 Raleigh International, 1975 Viscount Fixie, 1982 McLean, 1996 Lemond (Ti), 2002 Burley Zydeco tandem
__________________
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#53
born again cyclist
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,412
Likes: 88
From: Chicago
Bikes: I have five of brikes
i live roughly 5 miles from work. my route takes me through dense, urban, congested, trafficy surface streets on chicago's far north side and south evanston. times are roundtrip.
car: ~45 minutes @ rush hours
bike: ~50 minutes
train: ~60-90 minutes (i have a 10 minute walk to/from the station, and an annoying line transfer that's a total crap-shoot on the timing, hence the big range)
my driving vs. biking quotient is 1.111, so i need to have a pretty compelling reason not to simply just ride my bike to work.
car: ~45 minutes @ rush hours
bike: ~50 minutes
train: ~60-90 minutes (i have a 10 minute walk to/from the station, and an annoying line transfer that's a total crap-shoot on the timing, hence the big range)
my driving vs. biking quotient is 1.111, so i need to have a pretty compelling reason not to simply just ride my bike to work.
Last edited by Steely Dan; 11-02-15 at 12:19 PM.
#54
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,982
Likes: 11
From: Puget Sound
Bikes: 2007 Rocky Mountain Sherpa 30 (bionx), 2015 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Ultegra
34 minutes RT in the car
46 minutes RT on the e-bike
TCQ = 1.35
When commuting on carbon fiber road bike, RT = 55 minutes
TCQ = 1.62
46 minutes RT on the e-bike
TCQ = 1.35
When commuting on carbon fiber road bike, RT = 55 minutes
TCQ = 1.62
#55
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 304
Likes: 5
I don't just look at it as biking vs driving but as a time savings for getting in my workouts. So, all of the time I would have been driving is time saved because I'm getting a health benefit by riding instead. Then, all the savings related to not putting miles on the car is just a bonus.
#56
Another MN Bike Commuter
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 110
Likes: 0
From: Perham, Minnesota
Bikes: 2015 Trek Crockett / 2013 Trek Domane / 2014 Framed MN1.0
Around 3 here. My commute is ~17 miles, mostly rural with posted speed limits of 55-65mph ending in town with posted speed limit of 30mph (minimal traffic). I can generally keep an 18-20mph avg speed on bike. Would be impossible to reach 1 here unless I can find a semi taking my exact route and catch its draft
#58
Senior Member
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 8,896
Likes: 7
From: Raleigh, NC
Bikes: Waterford RST-22, Bob Jackson World Tour, Ritchey Breakaway Cross, Soma Saga, De Bernardi SL, Specialized Sequoia
My commute times vary a lot, whether by car or bike, depending on traffic, the weather, accidents and other factors. However, based on typical conditions, my round-trip commute takes about 130 minutes by bike and 60 minutes by car. So my TCQ would be 2.16666....
#61
Driving, including walking to my street-parked car ~2-4 blocks from my apartment, inching through horrific traffic, having to wait to park in a lot downtown, then having to find another parking spot near my apartment: ~70 minutes round trip on a good day (if there is such a thing, when being forced to drive in SF). Biking: ~20 minutes to work, ~25 home. So my ratio is somewhere around 0.65
I've driven to work a grand total of two times in the 14 months I've worked downtown. Both times were terrible.
I've driven to work a grand total of two times in the 14 months I've worked downtown. Both times were terrible.
#62
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 1,277
Likes: 4
From: Kota, Aichi, Japan
Bikes: 2011 Giant Seek R3, 2015 Specialized Allez Elite, 2017 Giant TCR Advanced 2
Mine is 1.59 on a good day and doesn't vary from that too much. I take a slightly longer route on the bike for safer roads on my 12 mile (each way) ride. Only 2 traffic signals coming in and 3 on my return and one busy road to merge into for a left hand turn.
My average speed is about 20.5 mph on the bike.
I use my commute for training so usually I'm pushing pretty hard.
I have limited time to bike so taking advantage of the time I would otherwise be driving has been a real bonus.
My average speed is about 20.5 mph on the bike.
I use my commute for training so usually I'm pushing pretty hard.
I have limited time to bike so taking advantage of the time I would otherwise be driving has been a real bonus.
#63
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 516
Likes: 12
I calculated my TCQ at around 0.66. No car, so the alternative to biking is taking the bus, which including walking and waiting averages about 30 minutes. My ride on the bike takes about 20 min. One of the reasons I started biking to work was to get there faster, the added bonus of being able to avoid waiting for and riding crowded buses was icing on the cake.
#64
Full Member
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 453
Likes: 2
From: Southern Appalachians
Bikes: A hauler, a commuter, and a steamroller.
~5 minutes cycling vs ~5 minutes on the motorcycle, give or take - a bit longer on the motorbike to get it out of the garage and moto parking is on the far side of the building, so parked-to-office takes longer. Or 10 minutes walking. Car parking would be similar to moto parking, but I don't have a car. In either case, spots are all gone unless you show up early.
Not sure the math works out when the commute distance is under one mile, but if your commute is that short you don't need a ratio to know that biking makes sense!
Not sure the math works out when the commute distance is under one mile, but if your commute is that short you don't need a ratio to know that biking makes sense!
#65
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 304
Likes: 5
How fast do you cruise at? I have a quite a bit more lights on my ride, and to get that average I need to cruise over 25mph, sometimes hitting 30mph on the flat roads (need a good tailwind or a truck to do that though). Jealous of your traffic lights per mile, that would not be possible in Japan.
I have my GPS watch set to auto pause when my speed gets down below 4mph which only happens if I get stopped at a traffic light so this helps when that happens but I still loose a few tenths of a mph as a result of slowing down to a stop and coming back to speed. You'd think you would gain some back getting a bit of a rest but I think that when you get stopped, you also get out of your rhythm a bit so you don't really benefit from it.
I can also tell a big difference when a truck is going by in the same direction. Even being off on the shoulder, that helps a lot. I wish I could have one escort me all the way to work/home - I could probably avg about 25mph with that kind of a pull.
With the days getting shorter, now I also seem to be racing the sun trying to get home before it starts getting dark. I have front/rear lights but would need a couple more for safe night time riding.
#66
Keepin it Wheel




Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 10,964
Likes: 5,222
From: San Diego
Bikes: Surly CrossCheck, Krampus
I moved closer to work in order to be able to bike commute full time (50mi rt --> 11mi rt). I used to average 1hr in the car every day, now I average 1hr on the bike every day. Sure, on the odd day I could get to work in probably half the time (TCQ~2), but since I started full-time bike-commuting exactly when I moved, in my mind it's TCQ~1.
Also I now shower principally at work. I like to think of that as a savings to my CA water bill, but water is lumped into my exorbitant townhouse HOA fees... (grrr)
Also I now shower principally at work. I like to think of that as a savings to my CA water bill, but water is lumped into my exorbitant townhouse HOA fees... (grrr)





