So would any ebike hit top legal speed if I provide 100 watts of power on 5% hills? If I can do 20 mph on the flat reasonable easy I might just get fitter and use my normal bike.
Careful, you'll have Galileo turning in his grave!Good news you will go faster downhill because of the extra weight of the bike!
We did the feather vs bolt drop in high school physics class too . 1 kg of wood and 1 kg of lead will both reach terminal velocity if dropped from high enough but one takes longer than the other because of air resistance...Careful, you'll have Galileo turning in his grave!
Acceleration due to gravity is a constant, not weight dependent.
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You and your bike (110kgs) will need 550W to fly up 5% hills at 15mph.So would any ebike hit top legal speed if I provide 100 watts of power on 5% hills?
No it isn't. We've been through this before. Your weight pulls you down the hill and the air resistance pulls you back. You can ignore rolling resistance because it's small compared with these two.The force on you, which provides the acceleration down the hill, is the difference between the two. You have to compare that net force with the mass of the rider plus bike. That ratio will always be bigger for a heavier combination, so the heavier one will accelerate faster and reach a higher terminal velocity than the lighter one.Careful, you'll have Galileo turning in his grave!
Acceleration due to gravity is a constant, not weight dependent.
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it may depend on clothing.so he'll accelerate faster and reach a higher terminal velocity than the lighter rider.