02-20-2012, 04:23 PM
Hi i would like to know how fast does a cyclist have to be going to create air pocket or vortex so that the rider behind can benefit from the slipstream. I tend to chase buses (not recommended) and you definitely feel the pull when you are within an area of about 3 metres or so. anything outside that and I dont feel it but you get resistance and find you have to work harder to keep up.
The reason why this has been coming up for me is because on quite a number of occasions when I have been cruising / napping on my put-together commuter bikes and some wannabe Lance Armstrongs would overtake. I they drop you, its fine but when they realize that not only am I able to match their speed but can outrun them if i want to, the attitude changes and they start weaving and complaining that you're sandbagging and you can see the aggression. Now its ok if they just pass and leasve you for dead but how dare a guy on a makeshift bike keep up with Lance. My commute is 15 miles one way and i do a return 5 days a week but they wouldnt know that.
Now my point is that I dont think the cyclist is traveling fast enough to create slipstream for the rider behind because I have never felt the effect of it whether I am in the front or behind, so I am wondering if these guys just spend too much time watching bike racing dvd's or Formula 1 and this might all be some sort of mumbo-jumbo but please let me know from a scientific point of view I am wrong because I am only talking form my experience.
The reason why this has been coming up for me is because on quite a number of occasions when I have been cruising / napping on my put-together commuter bikes and some wannabe Lance Armstrongs would overtake. I they drop you, its fine but when they realize that not only am I able to match their speed but can outrun them if i want to, the attitude changes and they start weaving and complaining that you're sandbagging and you can see the aggression. Now its ok if they just pass and leasve you for dead but how dare a guy on a makeshift bike keep up with Lance. My commute is 15 miles one way and i do a return 5 days a week but they wouldnt know that.
Now my point is that I dont think the cyclist is traveling fast enough to create slipstream for the rider behind because I have never felt the effect of it whether I am in the front or behind, so I am wondering if these guys just spend too much time watching bike racing dvd's or Formula 1 and this might all be some sort of mumbo-jumbo but please let me know from a scientific point of view I am wrong because I am only talking form my experience.