how much difference it would make the extra weight rider is carrying.
Is there an estimating technique available ?
for instance
24km/hour on - 15 kg bike given a 7 kg bike?
Once you have reached the speed, the only energy needed is to overcome rolling friction (wheels: bearing friction + rolling resistance on the road) and air drag. Of those, only the rolling friction (F_r) depends on the weight of the "object", the mass enters proportional:
F_r = m \gamma v,
m: mass, \gamma: friction coefficient, v: velocity (first order, but good enough).
an 80 kg rider would need to overcome about 9% higher rolling resistance at the same speed on the heavier bike.
However: the cyclists' main "enemy" is air drag. There, the velocity enters squared, so double speed = four times air drag. It depends also on the surface and shape of the object that is "dragged" through the air, so a more aerodynamical seat position will be more important than a light bike (the velocity needed here is the relative air speed, not the speed over ground, as everybody can tell who has eve ridden against the wind). The air drag plays usually the dominant role in cycling, rolling resistance is less important but still important enough.
This is only for a bike that is traveling on the plane and has reached it's final speed. In order to reach your final speed, you have to accelerate the extra mass (9% more). A heavier bike is also a problem when climbing (complete system is 9% heavier).
Well, I find the handling so different between my new road bike and my old Peugeot. I like both, the Peugeot is set up as a cyclocross, the steel fork gives a nice comfortable ride. The frame is not really stiff though (I can see the chainwheel moving sideways when pedaling very hard), and it starts to shimmy above 50 km/h. The road bike handles much quicker, feels more "direct" and agile, I sit on it more aggressive, STI levers are also a very nice invention, I now shift much more than on the Peugeot where I sometimes spin madly or hammer hard because I don't want to reach down to the down tube shifters. I don't really want to compare them and would keep them both (though the Peugeot's frame needs a paint job badly).
Thanks for posting guys! It's not about expense! Think this way how will u perform on a one hour ride on ur fav bike with extra weight say 9 kg on ur back! Removing the aerodynamics just the drag. How much time u lose?
Well, air drag will not be the same for both experiments unless you travel at the same speed. The only way to judge the influence of the extra weight would be the use of a power meter. If you don't have one, the experiment can not be done, at least not in any scientifically sound way.
Man thats a lot of info!!!!! But it goes without saying the lighter the better 'especially' when it comes climbing, and lets face it there ain't too many roads that are flat. But also in fairness it doesn't matter what bike your on if u can't spin the pedals forget it. So developing our own fitness and power output and controlling personal weight is the best place to start. "Just my opinion"
Well, most of my riding happens in the "Ried", a flat area south western of Frankfurt. It is flat.
Yeah, but the beer is so good, so I'd be gaining weight like crazy (hm, biking to and from the pub would burn some of the calories, alas probably not all).