Can anyone check my calcs below to see if I’ve made any glaringly obvious errors?
I’ve always wanted to know how much effort I’m putting in compared to the battery and I’ve come up with a calculation which I think works. I’ve looked through the forum but I can’t find anything like it.
I found the following table of kcals burned per hour for non-assisted cycling at Calories Burned During Exercise - NutriStrategy :
Kcals burned per hour for a person weighing 205lb:-
Cycling, <10mph, leisure bicycling ____372
Cycling, 10-11.9mph, light __________558
Cycling, 12-13.9mph, moderate ______745
Cycling, 14-15.9mph, vigorous _______931
Cycling, 16-19mph, very fast, racing _1117
Cycling, >20mph, racing ___________1489
Obviously a very rough guide to say 9.9 m.p.h is 372 and 10 m.p.h. is 558 – but I will do some work on that.
In March I cycled 13.3 miles home in exactly 1 hour after dropping my car off at the scrap yard
So, according to the table, the energy used (by myself and my battery combined) was about 745 kcals.
When I charge the battery I use an energy monitor sneakily rigged to show how much energy is supplied down to 1/10,000[SUP]th[/SUP] kWh i.e. in Watt hours (Wh) to 1 decimal place.
After scrapping my car the energy used to recharge the battery was 144.2 Wh which I have converted to kcals. 144.2 Wh x 0.86 = 124 kcals.
This should mean that the most the battery could have assisted me was 124 kcals. I presume this is likely to be much less due to inefficiencies of charging and energy delivery to the motor – but could it be similarly inefficient as the human body processing calories from food?
I therefore burned 745 (total) -124 (battery) = 621 kcals
I reckon I normally burn about 140 kcals per hr so the extra for cycling is 621-140 = 481 kcals.
So I contributed 481 kcals and the battery contributed 124 kcals.
Approx. 80% : 20%
The biggest issue is hills (always!) – If your ride is uphill you will obviously go slower and the calorie table then says that you are burning fewer calories per hour (don't think so) but perhaps that evens out if there are equivalent ups and downs?
I think I should be adding the extra weight (in excess of typical bike weight) to my own weight when calculating kcals burned. What do you reckon? (If you follow the link to the calorie table the kcals for each weight shown are simply pro rata so it's easy to work out kcals for other weights. The more you weigh and the more you carry, the more work you have to do.)
btw if anyone’s interested in rigging an energy monitor to show Wh then simply enter the price per unit (kWh) as 999.9 and then read the total price for the energy supplied as Wh.
I’ve always wanted to know how much effort I’m putting in compared to the battery and I’ve come up with a calculation which I think works. I’ve looked through the forum but I can’t find anything like it.
I found the following table of kcals burned per hour for non-assisted cycling at Calories Burned During Exercise - NutriStrategy :
Kcals burned per hour for a person weighing 205lb:-
Cycling, <10mph, leisure bicycling ____372
Cycling, 10-11.9mph, light __________558
Cycling, 12-13.9mph, moderate ______745
Cycling, 14-15.9mph, vigorous _______931
Cycling, 16-19mph, very fast, racing _1117
Cycling, >20mph, racing ___________1489
Obviously a very rough guide to say 9.9 m.p.h is 372 and 10 m.p.h. is 558 – but I will do some work on that.
In March I cycled 13.3 miles home in exactly 1 hour after dropping my car off at the scrap yard
So, according to the table, the energy used (by myself and my battery combined) was about 745 kcals.
When I charge the battery I use an energy monitor sneakily rigged to show how much energy is supplied down to 1/10,000[SUP]th[/SUP] kWh i.e. in Watt hours (Wh) to 1 decimal place.
After scrapping my car the energy used to recharge the battery was 144.2 Wh which I have converted to kcals. 144.2 Wh x 0.86 = 124 kcals.
This should mean that the most the battery could have assisted me was 124 kcals. I presume this is likely to be much less due to inefficiencies of charging and energy delivery to the motor – but could it be similarly inefficient as the human body processing calories from food?
I therefore burned 745 (total) -124 (battery) = 621 kcals
I reckon I normally burn about 140 kcals per hr so the extra for cycling is 621-140 = 481 kcals.
So I contributed 481 kcals and the battery contributed 124 kcals.
Approx. 80% : 20%
The biggest issue is hills (always!) – If your ride is uphill you will obviously go slower and the calorie table then says that you are burning fewer calories per hour (don't think so) but perhaps that evens out if there are equivalent ups and downs?
I think I should be adding the extra weight (in excess of typical bike weight) to my own weight when calculating kcals burned. What do you reckon? (If you follow the link to the calorie table the kcals for each weight shown are simply pro rata so it's easy to work out kcals for other weights. The more you weigh and the more you carry, the more work you have to do.)
btw if anyone’s interested in rigging an energy monitor to show Wh then simply enter the price per unit (kWh) as 999.9 and then read the total price for the energy supplied as Wh.
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