Why Can You Balance a Bicycle in Motion But Not When Stationary?

  • Thread starter Thread starter SkepticJ
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Bicycle Physics
AI Thread Summary
Balancing a bicycle in motion is easier than when stationary due to the dynamics of movement and the forces at play. When riding, even at low speeds, the contact patch of the tires generates side forces and allows for greater movement, which aids in maintaining balance. In contrast, when stopped, the limited range of movement and forces makes it challenging to stay upright. While some individuals can balance on a unicycle without moving, they still need to make slight adjustments by shifting weight and turning. Overall, the combination of motion and the resulting forces is crucial for balance on a bicycle.
SkepticJ
Messages
243
Reaction score
1
When I'm riding my bicycle, I can be barely moving forward--say 10 cm/sec.--and I'm able to maintain my balance easily. But if I'm completely stopped, I cannot do it.

Of course some people can maintain their balance on a unicycle when they're not moving, but I don't have balancing skills which are too unusual.

So, what's going on here? What difference does that little bit of velocity make?

I don't think it can be the gyroscopic properties of the turning wheels, because they're barely spinning.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
When you're moving, even at slow speed, you can generate more side force (which produces a rolling torque) and side displacement at the front tire contact patch, than you can while stopped. Because the contact patch is behind the pivot axis, it is possible to balanace while standing still, something that veledrome bicycle racers are good at, but it's difficult do the very small range of relative movment of the contact patch with respect ot the bicycle when stopped. When the bicycle is moving, the contact patch moves in the direction the tire is steered, which allows for much more movement and side force.
 
SkepticJ said:
Of course some people can maintain their balance on a unicycle when they're not moving,

No they can't. They have to keep moving backwards and forwards, turning slightly each time to adjust their balance.
 
Consider an extremely long and perfectly calibrated scale. A car with a mass of 1000 kg is placed on it, and the scale registers this weight accurately. Now, suppose the car begins to move, reaching very high speeds. Neglecting air resistance and rolling friction, if the car attains, for example, a velocity of 500 km/h, will the scale still indicate a weight corresponding to 1000 kg, or will the measured value decrease as a result of the motion? In a second scenario, imagine a person with a...
Dear all, in an encounter of an infamous claim by Gerlich and Tscheuschner that the Greenhouse effect is inconsistent with the 2nd law of thermodynamics I came to a simple thought experiment which I wanted to share with you to check my understanding and brush up my knowledge. The thought experiment I tried to calculate through is as follows. I have a sphere (1) with radius ##r##, acting like a black body at a temperature of exactly ##T_1 = 500 K##. With Stefan-Boltzmann you can calculate...
Thread 'Gauss' law seems to imply instantaneous electric field propagation'
Imagine a charged sphere at the origin connected through an open switch to a vertical grounded wire. We wish to find an expression for the horizontal component of the electric field at a distance ##\mathbf{r}## from the sphere as it discharges. By using the Lorenz gauge condition: $$\nabla \cdot \mathbf{A} + \frac{1}{c^2}\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t}=0\tag{1}$$ we find the following retarded solutions to the Maxwell equations If we assume that...
Back
Top