A bicycle built for none: Riderless bike helps researchers learn how balance rolls along

A bicycle built for none: Riderless bike helps researchers learn how balance rolls along
The bicycle model consists of two frames B and H connected by two wheels R and F. The model has a total of 25 geometry and mass-distribution parameters.

(PhysOrg.com)—In a discovery that could lead to better and safer bicycle design, researchers have shown that long-accepted "gyro" and "caster" effects are not needed to make a bike balance itself. In fact, it's a mixture of complicated physical effects – linked to the distribution of mass – that makes it so a bicycle can remain up when moving.

This finding was demonstrated on a riderless bike by researchers at Cornell University, the University of Wisconsin-Stout and Delft, The Netherlands. (Science, April 15, 2011.)

"It's all about how leaning automatically causes steering, which can bring the wheels back under a falling bike," said Andy Ruina, professor of mechanics at Cornell and a co-author on the paper titled, "Bicycles can be self-stable without gyroscopic or caster effects."

The trail or caster effect is called that because the front wheel of a bike behaves like the front caster wheel of a grocery cart.

This video shows two typical experimental runs, both at stable forward speed. The first run shows stable straight ahead motion, and the second run shows laterally perturbed stable motions.

To prove that gyro and caster effects were not needed, the researchers built a riderless bicycle with two small wheels, each matched with a counter-rotating disk to eliminate the gyro effects, and with the front wheel contact point slightly ahead of the steering axis, giving it a negative caster effect. When launched at more than about 5 mph, the research bike – like many bicycles – still balanced itself. If you knock it slightly to one side, it straightens itself back upright.

A bicycle built for none: Riderless bike helps researchers learn how balance rolls along
Self-stable experimental TMS bicycle rolling and balancing (photo by Sam Rentmeester/FMAX).

"We have found that almost any self-stable bicycle can be made unstable by misadjusting either the trail, the front-wheel or the front-assembly, center-of-mass position," the researchers explained in their paper.

"Conversely, many unstable bicycles can be made stable by appropriately adjusting any one of these three design variables."

This video demonstrates the working of the front counter-spinning wheel which eliminates the spin angular momentum of the front wheel.

While their work was intended to gain insight into the nature of bicycle balance, the researchers said, their analysis might lead to further improvements in bicycle design.

"The evolutionary process that has led to common present bicycle designs might not yet have explored potentially useful regions in design space," the report concludes.

More information: A bicycle can be self-stable without gyroscopic or caster effects, J. D. G. Kooijman, J. P. Meijaard, Jim M. Papadopoulos, Andy Ruina, and A. L. Schwab, Science Magazine (2011).

Provided by Cornell University

Citation: A bicycle built for none: Riderless bike helps researchers learn how balance rolls along (2011, April 14) retrieved 18 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2011-04-bicycle-built-riderless-bike.html
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