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- Newsgroups: rec.running
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!newstand.syr.edu!rodan.acs.syr.edu!mcconnel
- From: mcconnel@rodan.acs.syr.edu (Terry R. McConnell)
- Subject: Re: Mileage meters
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.203313.8986@newstand.syr.edu>
- Keywords: mileage bicycles
- Organization: Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY
- References: <857@jgaltstl.UUCP>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 92 20:33:12 EST
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <857@jgaltstl.UUCP> terry@jgaltstl.UUCP (terry linhardt) writes:
- >Does anyone know where you can get the 'gadget' which is attached
- >to a bicycle and then used to measure distances? I know they are
- >often used by race officials to lay out a certified course.
- >What are they correctly called?
- >--
- > Terry Linhardt ...!wupost!jgaltstl!terry
- > terry%jgaltstl.uucp@wupost.wustl.edu
-
- TAC Rule 133 states that all certified race courses must be measured
- according to standards set down by the Road Running Technical Committee
- (RRTC) and must include an addition of 0.1% of the stated distance. (i.e.,
- courses are to be measured intentionally long.) The RRTC has prepared a
- booklet entitled "Course Measurement Procedures" which is obtainable
- by sending $4.00 postpaid to
-
- TAC/USA
- Book Order Department
- P.O. Box 120
- Indianapolis, IN 46206
-
- The method described in this publication requires the use of a "Jones"
- counting device in connection with a 1000 foot calibration course measured
- by steel tape (procedure also described in the book ) or by a more accurate
- surveying technique. The counting device is attached to the wheel of a
- bicycle and assigns an arbitrary (but fixed on the time scale of the
- measurement) number of counts to each revolution of the wheel. The original
- device was invented by a man named Alan Jones and manufactured by his son,
- Clain. For many years it was sold through the NYRRC for about $40. Eventually
- the manufacture of the device was discontinued when a key gear part became
- unavailable. A new version is now made by a man named Paul Oerth. It can
- be obtained for $45 postpaid from
-
- Paul Oerth
- 2455 Union Street
- Apt 412
- San Francisco, CA 94123
-
- The price may have changed by now.
-
- The method of use of the Jones counter is simple, practical, and elegant.
- One rides the 1000ft calibration course and notes the number of counts
- elapsed. This establishes the number of counts required for 5K, 10K, or
- whatever, after a bit of simple arithmetic. One then rides the desired
- course and marks the point where the computed number of counts runs out.
- (The official method requires some repetition and elaboration, but this
- is the basic idea. )
-
- You don't need to know the radius of your bicycle tire, and you don't
- even need to ride particulary straight, so long as you tend to wobble
- to the same extent on the race course as you do on the calibration
- course. The sum of many random "wobbles" tends to have a remarkably
- predictable long term effect. Moreover, the effect of the wobbles on the
- measurement of the race course enters with the opposite sign from that
- on the calibration, and the two tend to cancel.
-
- Experience has shown that this method has an accuracy of about .05%.
- When I measure a 10K course with another person, our two measurements
- seldom differ by more than a bike length or so. It's amazing.
- --
- ************************************************************************
- Terry McConnell Mathematics/215 Carnegie/Syracuse, N.Y. 13244-1150
- mcconnel@rodan.acs.syr.edu NeXTmail: tmc@barnyard.syr.edu
- ************************************************************************
-