How fast is fast?
#1
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Cat 4
Joined: May 2008
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From: Gaithersburg MD
Bikes: Blue RC6AL - Rival Build
How fast is fast?
So I got my cyclocomputer setup today and took it out for a trip. I was headed down hill and my comp showed I was doing 39mph and I am not sure if thats right. It was a fairly steep hill and I was moving very fast so I was some what confused if it was correct or not. Also the settings were all set correctly for my tire size and its wired so should be no interference.
So is 39mph to fast to be true or is that a regular speed for a down hill run?
So is 39mph to fast to be true or is that a regular speed for a down hill run?
#3
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From: Okanagan Valley, BC CANADA
Bikes: Trek 7300FX, Lemond Sarthe
All my rides have hills on them and so I pretty much always hit at least 65 km/hr (40 mph) unless its raining or in the spring and the roads have sand on them (lots of curves on the down hill). This is approaching fast, but fast for me is 80 km/hr. (50 mph).
There is a really good video on Utube of some guys in the tour doing 100 km/hr. Wish I had the link. It needs to be steep to go that fast, you (or at least I) can't spin that fast.
There is a really good video on Utube of some guys in the tour doing 100 km/hr. Wish I had the link. It needs to be steep to go that fast, you (or at least I) can't spin that fast.
Last edited by bccycleguy; 06-07-08 at 08:23 PM.
#6
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From: South Jersey
I never really trusted my computer till I rode by one of the police "your speed is ___" machines. my cateye was dead on. (as a side note those things are addicting, I kept riding around the block to pass it again and again, I never realized I would work on bikers, but I guess they use the same things for baseball speeds and I am larger than that
)
)
#7
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From: A Coffin Called Earth. or Toronto, ON
Bikes: Bianchi, Miyata, Dahon, Rossin
I hit 60km/h (the speed limit) down a small hump (less than 500m) with tail wind today.
I need to find a bigger hill... or deeper valley.
I need to find a bigger hill... or deeper valley.
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Food for thought: if you aren't dead by 2050, you and your entire family will be within a few years from starvation. Now that is a cruel gift to leave for your offspring. ;)
https://sanfrancisco.ibtimes.com/arti...ger-photos.htm
#8
Thread Starter
Cat 4
Joined: May 2008
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From: Gaithersburg MD
Bikes: Blue RC6AL - Rival Build
Lucky the road I was on was very smooth cause on the way back I was going down another hill doing about 35mph and had to slow down. Their was to many pot holes and crap on the road for a storm we had a couple days ago. Anyway good to see I got some speed ha.
#10
simply bikin'
Joined: Oct 2007
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From: Asheville, NC
Bikes: 2009 Specialized Roubaix Pro; 2009 Specialized Tricross Sport; 2009 Specialized Rockhopper 29er Comp; 2006 Flyte Arsenal; 2001 Bianchi Reparto Corse Boron XL; 2007 Raleigh One Way; 1986 Raleigh Alyeska Touring
+1 - 39 can be done fairly easily. For reference:
And those are by no means meant to be bragging... all are only modest numbers. There IS always faster.
- I've been up around 50 any number of times. Fastest I've ever descended was 52 mph. Hogpen Gap, northern GA. 15% grade, and a mostly straight shot for about 2 miles. I'm a chicken... a number of the guys I was riding with went faster.
- Just the other day I hit 41 on a little 3% downhill grade with a tailwind the other day, and I've done 40+ on flats in strong tailwinds.
- My fastest sprint that I know of is 36.
- My group can run mid-30s in a paceline on flat ground with a decent tailwind.
And those are by no means meant to be bragging... all are only modest numbers. There IS always faster.
#14
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Joined: Apr 2008
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From: Irvine, CA
Bikes: 2010 Felt FC
Like ExMachina, i'll usually hit around 40-44mph on a downhill. Today I hit 51mph on a steep downhill, about 12% grade. my fastest is 54mph which was on the same hill, and I was in a paceline until i hit about 50mph, then I pulled out of the paceline and flew past everyone. Going that fast is a rush.
#15
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From: Irvine, CA
Bikes: 2010 Felt FC
riding in a group, the average speed will obviously be higher. I would say anything above 25mph is fast, with speeds being in the low 30's for the best riders.
#16
Bike ≠ Car ≠ Ped.

Joined: Jul 2007
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From: Washington, DC
Bikes: Some bikes. Hell, they're all the same, ain't they?
They might have slowed somewhat as the race wore on, but I'll swear that the lead teams must've been pushing 40 when they dropped the hammer on the last couple laps.
The tires on the Subaru SUV that was riding support occasionally howled & chirped around the corners while keeping up with the breakaway group.
I'm surprised that there were only two crashes, considering how crappy parts of those streets are.
#19
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From: Okanagan Valley, BC CANADA
Bikes: Trek 7300FX, Lemond Sarthe
I passed a big shiny Dodge Ram 3500 4X4 going 65 km/hr downhill through some sharp curves once, the driver was real pissed. [I'd ridden that route a 100 times and knew the line though those curves like the back of my hand.]
#20
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Joined: Apr 2005
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From: Northern California
Depends on what kind of distance you are talking about. Solo 25 miles in 1 hour on an open road with a normal bike is an excellent time. All those 30+ miles in one hour times that you read about are indoors on a smooth wooden track with special time trial bikes.
#21
moth -----> flame


Joined: Dec 2007
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From: SF Bay Area
Bikes: 18 Tarmac SL6, 11 CAAD 10-4, 07 Specialized Roubaix Comp, 98 Peugeot Horizon
I've hit 50 on downhills as well - once you get past the "wow this is amazing, but I'm so screwed if I crash now" feeling, the thing that gets to me is how long it takes you to slow a bike down from those kind of speeds.
Can't beat the feeling of knowing you can do that without gasoline.
Can't beat the feeling of knowing you can do that without gasoline.
#23
Bike ≠ Car ≠ Ped.

Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 13,863
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From: Washington, DC
Bikes: Some bikes. Hell, they're all the same, ain't they?
#24
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My brother and I have a joke. If someone says they can do 30, they can really do 27 consistently. If someone says they were commuting at 20 mph, they mean 17 mph... Everyone will overestimate.
If you're talking about really pushing on the flats, a good non-pro rider can hold 30 mph for a short time.
If you're talking about time trials in the category 3-4-5 level, 23-27 mph is about the sustainable range for winners of races more than a half-hour.
Try looking up some TT race results for flat courses and calculate their average speed.
If you're talking about really pushing on the flats, a good non-pro rider can hold 30 mph for a short time.
If you're talking about time trials in the category 3-4-5 level, 23-27 mph is about the sustainable range for winners of races more than a half-hour.
Try looking up some TT race results for flat courses and calculate their average speed.






