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The speed with which your bike turns is determined
by several factors:
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Steering head castor angle
Fork offset
Trail
Weight of front wheel / tyre
Length and weight of bike
Centre of gravity
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A typical setup for a modern sports bike would be
24 degree head angle, 25 to 30 mm fork offset, 96 mm trail, 1400
mm wheelbase and around 175 kilos weight.
The figure below shows the relationship between the
steering components. A quick study of this and it becomes pretty
clear that altering any one of the steering settings will affect
all the others. So, if the fork offset is reduced, the fork axis
will move back a little, so increasing the trail. But what affect
will this have? What is trail anyway?
Take
the ubiquitous shopping trolley. Pull one from any canal or parkland
pond and study its front castors. The steering castor angle is pretty
much 0 degrees, so the wheel will happily twizzle round any which
way with minimum effort and exhibits zero stability. However, the
design of the wheel mount introduces a fair bit of trail, which
introduces some directional stability to the assembly - push the
trolley forward and the wheel will trail the steering axis, so we
have some directional control. The fork offset is effectively the
distance from the steering bar at the back of the trolley to the
castor at the front - pretty huge. So when you want to turn you
have to use a fair bit of effort to rotate the trolley. Although
the steering is thus quite heavy and ponderous, the relative lack
of directional stability of the castor itself means the trolley
will happily shoot off in the wrong direction with the minimum of
fuss. Heavy steering yet poor stability? ... sounds like an R1!
And we all know that a fully laden trolley is harder to manoeuvre
than an empty one, just like a heavy bike.
How does this translate to bikes? Well, to improve
directional stability they introduce a larger steering angle, typically
24 degrees. Thus the wheel centre is pushed out forward of the steering
stem and the pivot point of the tyre on the road is behind the steering
axis, so imparting an amount of trail and stabilising the steering,
as to turn the wheel the tyre must scrub on the road - hence it
is often called the scrub radius. To reduce the trail to an optimum
level the forks are offset forward of the steering stem pivot, by
typically around 30mm. Ideal steering characteristics are reached
by balancing the relationship between the steering angle and the
scrub radius. Why not simply provide stable steering by using more
trail? Because the increasing scrub radius leads to heavy steering.
Mick demonstrates the art of counter-steering.
Only trouble is, he's using the back wheel.
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Initiating a turn on a bike is a little odd, due to
the effects of the castor angle of the steering stem, centrifugal
torque and gyroscopic forces from the rotating wheel. Whilst travelling
straight ahead, if the right bar is pushed forward the wheel will
turn to the left, but as it is held out at an angle in front of
the bike and the pivot point on the road is thus behind the natural
steering axis, centrifugal torque leans the bike to the right. This
torque is also trying to lean the front wheel over, which is subject
to gyroscopic forces, and these counter the leaning torque by trying
to steer the wheel right. All the time that the wheel is turning
left, the lean angle of the bike is increasing. The wheel angle
slowly reaches zero and then starts to steer right. At this point
the lean angle stabilises as the centrifugal torque reverses and
balances gravitational forces. Push the right bar now the forces
will be reversed and the bike will lift to the upright position.
And just as well, or motorcycles would never have caught on.
It's possible to steer a bike without using the bars
at all, just by shifting bodyweight and using the hips to initiate
a lean angle - to turn right you push your hips left and lean your
upper body to the right. However, the forces are weak and so most
riders use a combination of steering and body language to steer
their bikes. The minimum time taken to transfer the bike from upright
to full lean is achieved by counter-steering, shift of bodyweight
to the inside of the turn by hanging off, and weighting the footrests.
An added benefit from the shift in bodyweight is a reduced lean
angle for a given turn, as the centre of mass is moved outward.
Useful if you have problems with ground clearance.
An interesting aside. Why is it easy to stay upright
on a bike which is moving forwards, but very difficult if it is
standing still? It is a commonly proposed theory that the wheels
act like gyroscopes and impart the necessary stability to hold the
bike upright. Think about this for a minute. If this were true then
the faster a bike went the more stable it would become, until it
was impossible to lean or steer at all. In fact, a bike is pretty
much as stable at 20 mph as at 70 mph. OK, gyroscopic forces on
the front wheel do slow steering somewhat at high speed, but the
forces involved are insufficient to hold the bike upright. So what's
the answer? I'll tell ya - TRAIL. Yup. The friction of the tyres
on the road pulls the wheels (don't forget, the rear wheel also
has trail) in line behind the steering axis, so the bike maintains
line and stability. This stability corrects the minor deviations
in balance by allowing the steering to wander about its axis, but
always returns the wheels to the inline position. If you've got
a steering damper fitted, screw it up to maximum and try and ride
your bike ... but be careful, it'll be very unstable as the damper
will slow the steering's response to the trail scrub. Or try riding
your bike in reverse, when it has negative trail. You won't get
far! And don't blame me if you fall off!!
If you analyse the steering behaviour when you are
riding slowly you will see than the bike doesn't really travel in
a straight line, but in a series of shallow curves, first left then
right, and this constant gentle weaving allows you to balance the
bike. OK, it seems easy to you now, but just think back to when
you were learning to ride a bicycle, how long it took you to suss
the trick of balancing. Take a look at a trials rider when he is
holding his bike on balance at a standstill - he maintains balance
by exaggerated shifts in bodyweight and rapid turns of the steering,
emulating the natural affect of trail on a moving bike.
OK class, end of physics lesson.
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