Stonechat
Guru
- Location
- Staines, Middlesex
Total coward descending
Don't even like 30 mph
Don't even like 30 mph
Is that misnamed on the map?
I had assumed from your post you were talking about broomfield hill, yet this is marked as sawyer's (which doesn't have any pinch points and is a pretty straight and safe descent (unless you are Fabian cancellara).
I'm lucky enough to only live 5 minutes from the park, so do get to use it often (100+laps a year).
The descent of broomfield (when riding ACW) is tricky and I have often seen the aftermath of people over cooking the corner - it's camber is very difficult and will spit you out very easily. The surface is also less than perfect.
Cars do often cross the solid white lines to overtake bikes climbing the hill, and I have seen a number of very close misses over the years.
Glad you survived the prang!
None of them, apparently...
Ah, yes. Brings back fond memories of my near-stack coming down a mountain. Nothing to do with cars, though, just me not quite being careful enough! (fast-forward to 4:30)
I must be slow-witted today, because I don't quite get that!
I am 58 and would do 58 mph on a descent, but that is close to my mental limit. I would certainly be reluctant to exceed 70 mph. It would seem odd to pack up cycling at 73 because I was only willing to do, say, 69 mph!
When I got my first road bike I got a real kick out of being able to go downhill at 30mph, then it crept up a bit and I could get to 42mph even on Suffolk roads, then I went up North and got nearly to 55mph. It was when I reached nearly 55mph that I realised the cheapo audax frame I ride isn't really cut out for speed. A realisation I soon forgot. Until today.
I was descending a hill in Richmond Park, just about to knock it into my highest gear and go into an aero tuck when an oncoming Merc pulled onto my side of the road to overtake a cyclist. I feathered the brakes, feathered some more and decided to try and squeeze through the gap that would be left between the car and the kerb. Not ideal, there was a fair amount of gravelly debris in that narrow margin. As I tried to relax my grip on the bike and continued to attempt an emergency deceleration the bike started leaping about under me like a bucking bronco. I really had to work hard to keep my calm but I was loosing control fast so had to go where the bike wanted to take me, which was off the road. I managed to stay upright somehow and came to a halt at the end of a deep furrow carved by my wheels in the grass.
That's it. I'm DONE with descending fast, at least until I get a bike fit for purpose![]()
Steel frames are notorious for developing a shimmy, it could be triggered by unbalanced wheel rims, once they reach the resonant frequency of the frame the whole thing becomes a monster. The trick is to change the resonant frequency of the frame by clinging onto the top bar or making firm contact with the frame using legs, this might detune the frame enough to kill the wobble.