Why do we love the cycling equation here? For me, applying equations to deal with the passion we feel for cycling is just always funny. Reducing one’s love to some numbers and square root signs doesn’t work but the attempts to quantify always bring a smile. So sharpen your pencils and break out the slide rulers, we have some homework here. Thanks to @JimBywater for doing the calculations.
VLVV, Gianni
How hard is it for a man to ride his bike?
This isn’t a metaphysical or rhetorical interrogation, but a completely serious, straight forward question. Well, it depends where you live, what you do for work and what significant others you have in your life. They provide the all-important variables determining any man’s ability to successfully mount leg over bike.
But let’s take this question one step at a time. How hard is it for any man to ride his bike? Literally.
Well, first you have to learn how to ride a bike. Done. I did that when I was about 5 years old.
Next, you have to own or have access to a bike to ride. Check. 4 of them in the shed. Road, gravel, hybrid or mountain. Take your pick.
So, I have the requisite skills and equipment. Just need to choose a time and away I go.
How about today. Thursday 11th February 2016. Well, I have work between 9 and 5. I could cycle 30 miles to work, but the weather forecast shows it being about 1 degree at the time I’d need to leave, which means there would probably be ice, which is a little dangerous. However it does look like it’ll brighten up in the afternoon, so perhaps I could leave the office early and get a ride in. All my work is up to date, and baring any emergencies this should be possible as I worked late this week on something and am owed some lieu time. Ok, how about 2pm. That gives me 3 hours before I have to get back to the house to help out with the family duties.
11:40 on Thursday and the network in the office has crashed. I’m responsible for the network in the office, so I suppose I better hang around until it’s fixed, which will mean I probably won’t make my 2pm riding appointment. Ok, perhaps if things go well I could go later in the evening, say 7pm. Weather forecast has it at going down to 3 degree, which is a little close to the ice creation limit. Looks like another day with no ride, making it 7 days in a row where I haven’t ridden my bike.
As I think back across the last 6 days, it becomes frustratingly clear to me that there are 6 major forces at work to stop any man from riding his bicycle. You can assign a value to each factor and work out your riding likelihood on any given day. The higher the score, the more unlikely it is that you’ll be riding any time soon. Work out your values, plug them into the below equation and read your score:
W (W+T+R) + Wk + R + I = the Bike Likelihood Equation
The Bike Likelihood Score Table
0 – Definitely, 150km minimum. Big bowl of porridge and enjoy the day!
1 – Very likely, at least 100km. A solid session, probably get some top 10’s on Strava.
2 – Highly probable, should be an 80km day. Keep the pace quick in case you need to get back.
3 – Likely, you’re looking at 2-3 hour window for a ride. Nice local loop early morning, late evening.
4 – Good chance it will happen, keen the bibs on underneath in anticipation.
5 – Possible, be sharp and go as soon as the chance occurs
6 – Not looking great, although things could turn around so keep the Lycra out
7 – Unlikely. You’ll have to be very lucky and very economical with your time
8 – Very unlikely. More chance of Cav beating Kittel in a sprint nowadays.
9 & above – It’s not happening. If you have 7 of these in a row, think about another sport. Maybe computer gaming or something.
How to Score: The 6 Opposing Forces of Cycling
Weather – this can be broken down into 3 major components:
Values – 0 = anything less than 13mph, 1 = 13 – 20 mph, 2 = 20-40mph, 3 = anything above 40mph
Values – 0 = 15 degree or above, 1 = 8 – 14 degree, 2 = 3 – 7 degree, 3 = below 3 degree
Values – 0 = not raining, 1 = spitting, 2 = raining, 3 = torrential downpour
Work
Values – 0 = no work impact whatsoever, 1 = occasional but very rare impact, 2 = rarely impacting but can exist with emergencies/special occasions, 3 = constant work impact (seriously demanding position with early mornings and late nights)
Relationship
Values – 0 = no ties, responsibilities or significant others, 1 = my wife is pretty cool but does draw the line at a romantic weekend in Roubaix around April time, 2 = kids are young enough that I can sneak out every weekend without major issue, 3 = major troubles as kids are into everything, busy evenings & weekends, 4 = Kids at level 3 plus grandparents in the mix at weekends
Illness
Values – 0 = clean bill of health, 1 = bit of sneezing/tight hammy, 2 = proper cold/sore knee, 3 = crocked with real injury or illness
So, if I assign some values for today and plug them into the formula let’s see what I get:
W – Not windy, very cold only going above 3 for a few hours while at work, no rain = 3
Wk – In the middle of a large, risky project upgrading telephony system in the office = 2
R – At least one child will need some attention and the wife will probably want to leave the house in the evening after spending all day inside it while potty training the 2 year old = 3
I – all good…at the moment = 0
Plug those values into the equation and we get
W (W0+T3+R0) + Wk2 + R3 + I0 = 8. Very Unlikely
If I run this formula on a simulation for myself in April, with some seasonal showers, a change in work situation but with R and I remaining fixed, you can see simply that the likelihood falls into a much more favourable score for my situation.
W (W0+T0+R1) + Wk1 + R3 + I0 = 5
When I look back across the previous 6 days, I can easily see that I’ve been scoring in between 7 and 9 every day, with at least 3 forces combining each time to prevent a cycling session from occurring.
Frustrating, but at least I can see what I need to do now. Change some variables. Move abroad, change jobs or ditch the family. Simple.
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View Comments
@ChrisO
Are you able to set up races and compete in some sort of closed club format ? So that participants are known/verified/trusted entities so to speak?
@ChrisO
There is no *replicate real riding.*
@wilburrox
Yes, basically that's the way the races which seem to get the best feedback are operating. It's not official so it depends on a volunteer taking on the task but for example there's one where the organiser asks you to send him a link to your Strava profile and your best 3 lap time around the course which he then uses to create time handicaps.
Some of the others have a categorisation system where they ask the top riders to move up categories if they win or consistently place highly although because that's a much more open event where anyone can turn up it means for every person who moves up a ringer takes their place and smashes everyone.
I think the race modules they are bringing out are more technical to allow synchronised starts and neutral zones so people don't sneak ahead, and I presume some timing - at the moment it works through Strava and some guy has written a piece of code to extract the results so racers have to enter the right 'code' in the title of the ride. Bit hit and miss.
@Universo The watts are real, no doubt about that !
Wow, I hate Math but your article makes me feel like Math is just that easy. :)
I just started learning bike (seriously with my age now) but many says it would be a great help for me to lose weight, so I did. I have been through injuries, wounds all over my knees but it's worth it. I also tried training classes at biketeacher.com for me to learn in building my own bike.