Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling

Road bicycle cyclists often have saddle discomfort and hand numbness after a long distance and high speed cycling. Fitting for road bicycle cyclist is unique, as it should take different handgrip positions into consideration. Gender difference in pelvic geometry and seat bone width should also take...

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Main Author: Teo, Wee Ting
Other Authors: Chen Chun-Hsien
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/64024
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-640242023-03-04T18:36:13Z Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling Teo, Wee Ting Chen Chun-Hsien School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Giant Manufacturing Co. Ltd, Loue Bicycles DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering Road bicycle cyclists often have saddle discomfort and hand numbness after a long distance and high speed cycling. Fitting for road bicycle cyclist is unique, as it should take different handgrip positions into consideration. Gender difference in pelvic geometry and seat bone width should also take into consideration when designing female road bicycle. In report, cycling motion and pressure distribution was collected in experiment to investigate the gender difference on different handgrip positions and handlebar heights. Result by using manually measured static fit and by using dynamic fit was compared to determine the reliability of manually measured static fit. The dynamic cycling movement showed that males have more stable and periodic cycling movement compare to females. Cyclists with triathlons experience tend to bend more to lower air resistance with narrower shoulder angle. When handgrip position shifted from drops to hoods to tops, both males saddle and hand maximum pressure increased. However, females with larger seat bone width would exert significant high hand pressure at tops to adjust backward the sit location on saddle, when sitting on COBB V Flow saddle, which has a narrow saddle width (V-Flow). The saddle maximum pressure of females fluctuated. When handlebar height shifted from original height H to 5cm increment and 5cm decrement, both hand and saddle maximum pressure increased and resulted in a discomfort riding. Flexibility of participants would affect the pressure result at different handlebar height. With manually measured static fit, 5 out of 10 participants initial back angle was out of desired range, which is 40° to 50°. With dynamic fit, all 8 of participants initial back angle was adjusted within 43.2° to 44.3°, with only 1.1° of difference. It was proved that manually measured static fit was good enough for leisure and normal sports uses; dynamic fit was required for cyclist who have high performance requirement. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2015-05-22T03:10:14Z 2015-05-22T03:10:14Z 2015 2015 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/64024 en Nanyang Technological University 94 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Teo, Wee Ting
Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
description Road bicycle cyclists often have saddle discomfort and hand numbness after a long distance and high speed cycling. Fitting for road bicycle cyclist is unique, as it should take different handgrip positions into consideration. Gender difference in pelvic geometry and seat bone width should also take into consideration when designing female road bicycle. In report, cycling motion and pressure distribution was collected in experiment to investigate the gender difference on different handgrip positions and handlebar heights. Result by using manually measured static fit and by using dynamic fit was compared to determine the reliability of manually measured static fit. The dynamic cycling movement showed that males have more stable and periodic cycling movement compare to females. Cyclists with triathlons experience tend to bend more to lower air resistance with narrower shoulder angle. When handgrip position shifted from drops to hoods to tops, both males saddle and hand maximum pressure increased. However, females with larger seat bone width would exert significant high hand pressure at tops to adjust backward the sit location on saddle, when sitting on COBB V Flow saddle, which has a narrow saddle width (V-Flow). The saddle maximum pressure of females fluctuated. When handlebar height shifted from original height H to 5cm increment and 5cm decrement, both hand and saddle maximum pressure increased and resulted in a discomfort riding. Flexibility of participants would affect the pressure result at different handlebar height. With manually measured static fit, 5 out of 10 participants initial back angle was out of desired range, which is 40° to 50°. With dynamic fit, all 8 of participants initial back angle was adjusted within 43.2° to 44.3°, with only 1.1° of difference. It was proved that manually measured static fit was good enough for leisure and normal sports uses; dynamic fit was required for cyclist who have high performance requirement.
author2 Chen Chun-Hsien
author_facet Chen Chun-Hsien
Teo, Wee Ting
format Final Year Project
author Teo, Wee Ting
author_sort Teo, Wee Ting
title Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
title_short Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
title_full Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
title_fullStr Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
title_full_unstemmed Influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
title_sort influence of gender, drop handlebar height, and handgrip position on dynamic motion during cycling
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/64024
_version_ 1759856304088678400