ollie_craw said:
You're incorrect on the gear ratios part. It needs to be used in the equation and it is the rear sprocket divided by the front chainring
Yes, I hadn't noticed that you were
multiplying by the gear ratio rather than dividing by it. Gear ratios on bikes are usually quoted as a ratio of distance rather than ratio of force, so one would define gear ratio as teeth on chainring divided by teeth on rear sprocket, which is the reciprocal of the mechanical advantage.
I don't know if this is still the practice, but when I was racing in the seventies one referred to the gear ratio in a typical top gear (back then, when one had only 2x5 = 10 speeds) of 52 x 13 as 108 inches, which was 52 teeth (on chainring) divided by 14 teeth (on rear sprocket) times 27 inches (diameter of wheel). This then had to be multiplied by pi to get the rollout distance. In Europe the practice was to quote the rollout distance, so it included the pi factor and was expressed in metres.
The angle of the hill won't make any difference to the ratio of circumferential force of foot on pedal to force of tyre on road. That ratio is completely determined by the geometry and gear train. However the angle of the hill may affect the rider's position on the bike, which may change how much of their weight is applied to the pedal. For instance on a very steep slope, one tends to stand, so that more of one's weight goes onto the pedal. There's also the issue of the angle between the force applied to the pedal and the circumferential direction, as it's only the component of the former in the latter direction that transmits to the rear wheel. That angle will vary with the position of the crank, but there will be one spot in each revolution at which the two directions align. That's the position of maximum power and component manufacturers have sometimes constructed elliptical chainrings that vary the gear ratio as the crank rotates, in order to even out the delivery of power. Pro riders sometimes use them in time trials but they've never really caught on in a big way.
The angle of the hill will however determine what proportion of the force of tyre on road goes towards
lift and what goes towards acceleration and countering drag. If the rider is going slowly so that drag is small, the steeper the hill, the smaller the proportion of push goes towards acceleration. That's why when one is climbing a steep hill slowly, one can be pushing hard on the pedals but not accelerating.