Do you get puzzled over all this talk of 5% or 12% hills, all just mumbo jumbo, or even if you understand it, do you know how to classify your hills to compare them?
Here's how, the easy way.
You need a spirit level, you may have one already in a set square or separately, but if not, buy a cheap one from a DIY or tool shop. If you haven't got one, also get an extending rule with centimetres on it. Then get a strip of straight metal or wood and cut it to exactly 100 centimetres long. Place the spirit level on the top surface of your straight strip and secure it firmly with tape or rubber bands.
That's your measuring apparatus complete. If the hill you want to measure isn't at home, you can tie that strip to your crossbar to ride to your destination.
Now on a representative sloping part of the hill, rest one end of your strip on the road surface with the spirit level above and the bubble kept centralised. With the other hand, hold the rule extended and vertical against the road directly above the other end of the strip and note the centimetre measure where it meets the underside of the strip right at the end. Thats the percentage measure of your hill, it's as easy as that, just the distance from the road surface vertically to the 100 cm point on the underside of your strip. If it's 11 cm, it's an 11% hill. Just make sure the bubble is central as you read the measurement.
If you want the whole thing more compact, use a 50 cm strip and measure in half centimetres.
Now all over Britain people will be wondering where all the surveyors have sprung from!
.
Here's how, the easy way.
You need a spirit level, you may have one already in a set square or separately, but if not, buy a cheap one from a DIY or tool shop. If you haven't got one, also get an extending rule with centimetres on it. Then get a strip of straight metal or wood and cut it to exactly 100 centimetres long. Place the spirit level on the top surface of your straight strip and secure it firmly with tape or rubber bands.
That's your measuring apparatus complete. If the hill you want to measure isn't at home, you can tie that strip to your crossbar to ride to your destination.
Now on a representative sloping part of the hill, rest one end of your strip on the road surface with the spirit level above and the bubble kept centralised. With the other hand, hold the rule extended and vertical against the road directly above the other end of the strip and note the centimetre measure where it meets the underside of the strip right at the end. Thats the percentage measure of your hill, it's as easy as that, just the distance from the road surface vertically to the 100 cm point on the underside of your strip. If it's 11 cm, it's an 11% hill. Just make sure the bubble is central as you read the measurement.
If you want the whole thing more compact, use a 50 cm strip and measure in half centimetres.
Now all over Britain people will be wondering where all the surveyors have sprung from!
.
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