Can road bumps excite frame eigen frequencies?











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During my last bike holiday I have happened to ride downwhill on roads which had transversal stripes to mark the approaching of a turn.



Road stripes



The stripes were made with road paint, and were slightly higher than the road plane, so that passing on them makes you feel the bump.



At the speed one can reach while on downhill the repeated "ta-ta-pum" is non comfortable, so I was induced to slow down.



However I was wondering: could it happen that, for some particular speed of the bike, the bump frequency resonates with the frame Eigen frequency leading to potential catastrophic frame failure?










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  • Not sure about the frame but my phone mount rearranged itself going over a similar stretch last night. Round here you'd have to go very slowly indeed to significantly lessen the sensation of vibration - not much more than walking pace, at which point it's a series of distinct bumps. I would expect frames to be reasonably well damped, and to resonate at higher frequency (but the frequency is a guess based on what my steel frame sounds like when tapped). +1
    – Chris H
    Nov 15 at 12:39










  • I have certainly had frame resonance (on a loaded bike) induced by bumps. I'm not sure that the stripes could do it, though, either in terms of their frequency or their "intensity". And you can get resonance on a steep downhill without any significant roughness in the road surface, so it would be hard to say that a particular instance was induced by stripes.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 13:21






  • 9




    Given the bad grip that road paint gives (especially in the wet), those road markings look horrifically dangerous for cyclists and motorbike riders.
    – David Richerby
    Nov 15 at 17:09










  • @DavidRicherby, I rode those under the rain... -.-''
    – L.Dutch
    Nov 15 at 19:56






  • 5




    That is a serious case of painting the problem instead of engineering around the problem.
    – Criggie
    Nov 15 at 21:44















up vote
23
down vote

favorite
2












During my last bike holiday I have happened to ride downwhill on roads which had transversal stripes to mark the approaching of a turn.



Road stripes



The stripes were made with road paint, and were slightly higher than the road plane, so that passing on them makes you feel the bump.



At the speed one can reach while on downhill the repeated "ta-ta-pum" is non comfortable, so I was induced to slow down.



However I was wondering: could it happen that, for some particular speed of the bike, the bump frequency resonates with the frame Eigen frequency leading to potential catastrophic frame failure?










share|improve this question






















  • Not sure about the frame but my phone mount rearranged itself going over a similar stretch last night. Round here you'd have to go very slowly indeed to significantly lessen the sensation of vibration - not much more than walking pace, at which point it's a series of distinct bumps. I would expect frames to be reasonably well damped, and to resonate at higher frequency (but the frequency is a guess based on what my steel frame sounds like when tapped). +1
    – Chris H
    Nov 15 at 12:39










  • I have certainly had frame resonance (on a loaded bike) induced by bumps. I'm not sure that the stripes could do it, though, either in terms of their frequency or their "intensity". And you can get resonance on a steep downhill without any significant roughness in the road surface, so it would be hard to say that a particular instance was induced by stripes.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 13:21






  • 9




    Given the bad grip that road paint gives (especially in the wet), those road markings look horrifically dangerous for cyclists and motorbike riders.
    – David Richerby
    Nov 15 at 17:09










  • @DavidRicherby, I rode those under the rain... -.-''
    – L.Dutch
    Nov 15 at 19:56






  • 5




    That is a serious case of painting the problem instead of engineering around the problem.
    – Criggie
    Nov 15 at 21:44













up vote
23
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
23
down vote

favorite
2






2





During my last bike holiday I have happened to ride downwhill on roads which had transversal stripes to mark the approaching of a turn.



Road stripes



The stripes were made with road paint, and were slightly higher than the road plane, so that passing on them makes you feel the bump.



At the speed one can reach while on downhill the repeated "ta-ta-pum" is non comfortable, so I was induced to slow down.



However I was wondering: could it happen that, for some particular speed of the bike, the bump frequency resonates with the frame Eigen frequency leading to potential catastrophic frame failure?










share|improve this question













During my last bike holiday I have happened to ride downwhill on roads which had transversal stripes to mark the approaching of a turn.



Road stripes



The stripes were made with road paint, and were slightly higher than the road plane, so that passing on them makes you feel the bump.



At the speed one can reach while on downhill the repeated "ta-ta-pum" is non comfortable, so I was induced to slow down.



However I was wondering: could it happen that, for some particular speed of the bike, the bump frequency resonates with the frame Eigen frequency leading to potential catastrophic frame failure?







frames safety






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 15 at 11:04









L.Dutch

3,3681241




3,3681241












  • Not sure about the frame but my phone mount rearranged itself going over a similar stretch last night. Round here you'd have to go very slowly indeed to significantly lessen the sensation of vibration - not much more than walking pace, at which point it's a series of distinct bumps. I would expect frames to be reasonably well damped, and to resonate at higher frequency (but the frequency is a guess based on what my steel frame sounds like when tapped). +1
    – Chris H
    Nov 15 at 12:39










  • I have certainly had frame resonance (on a loaded bike) induced by bumps. I'm not sure that the stripes could do it, though, either in terms of their frequency or their "intensity". And you can get resonance on a steep downhill without any significant roughness in the road surface, so it would be hard to say that a particular instance was induced by stripes.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 13:21






  • 9




    Given the bad grip that road paint gives (especially in the wet), those road markings look horrifically dangerous for cyclists and motorbike riders.
    – David Richerby
    Nov 15 at 17:09










  • @DavidRicherby, I rode those under the rain... -.-''
    – L.Dutch
    Nov 15 at 19:56






  • 5




    That is a serious case of painting the problem instead of engineering around the problem.
    – Criggie
    Nov 15 at 21:44


















  • Not sure about the frame but my phone mount rearranged itself going over a similar stretch last night. Round here you'd have to go very slowly indeed to significantly lessen the sensation of vibration - not much more than walking pace, at which point it's a series of distinct bumps. I would expect frames to be reasonably well damped, and to resonate at higher frequency (but the frequency is a guess based on what my steel frame sounds like when tapped). +1
    – Chris H
    Nov 15 at 12:39










  • I have certainly had frame resonance (on a loaded bike) induced by bumps. I'm not sure that the stripes could do it, though, either in terms of their frequency or their "intensity". And you can get resonance on a steep downhill without any significant roughness in the road surface, so it would be hard to say that a particular instance was induced by stripes.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 13:21






  • 9




    Given the bad grip that road paint gives (especially in the wet), those road markings look horrifically dangerous for cyclists and motorbike riders.
    – David Richerby
    Nov 15 at 17:09










  • @DavidRicherby, I rode those under the rain... -.-''
    – L.Dutch
    Nov 15 at 19:56






  • 5




    That is a serious case of painting the problem instead of engineering around the problem.
    – Criggie
    Nov 15 at 21:44
















Not sure about the frame but my phone mount rearranged itself going over a similar stretch last night. Round here you'd have to go very slowly indeed to significantly lessen the sensation of vibration - not much more than walking pace, at which point it's a series of distinct bumps. I would expect frames to be reasonably well damped, and to resonate at higher frequency (but the frequency is a guess based on what my steel frame sounds like when tapped). +1
– Chris H
Nov 15 at 12:39




Not sure about the frame but my phone mount rearranged itself going over a similar stretch last night. Round here you'd have to go very slowly indeed to significantly lessen the sensation of vibration - not much more than walking pace, at which point it's a series of distinct bumps. I would expect frames to be reasonably well damped, and to resonate at higher frequency (but the frequency is a guess based on what my steel frame sounds like when tapped). +1
– Chris H
Nov 15 at 12:39












I have certainly had frame resonance (on a loaded bike) induced by bumps. I'm not sure that the stripes could do it, though, either in terms of their frequency or their "intensity". And you can get resonance on a steep downhill without any significant roughness in the road surface, so it would be hard to say that a particular instance was induced by stripes.
– Daniel R Hicks
Nov 15 at 13:21




I have certainly had frame resonance (on a loaded bike) induced by bumps. I'm not sure that the stripes could do it, though, either in terms of their frequency or their "intensity". And you can get resonance on a steep downhill without any significant roughness in the road surface, so it would be hard to say that a particular instance was induced by stripes.
– Daniel R Hicks
Nov 15 at 13:21




9




9




Given the bad grip that road paint gives (especially in the wet), those road markings look horrifically dangerous for cyclists and motorbike riders.
– David Richerby
Nov 15 at 17:09




Given the bad grip that road paint gives (especially in the wet), those road markings look horrifically dangerous for cyclists and motorbike riders.
– David Richerby
Nov 15 at 17:09












@DavidRicherby, I rode those under the rain... -.-''
– L.Dutch
Nov 15 at 19:56




@DavidRicherby, I rode those under the rain... -.-''
– L.Dutch
Nov 15 at 19:56




5




5




That is a serious case of painting the problem instead of engineering around the problem.
– Criggie
Nov 15 at 21:44




That is a serious case of painting the problem instead of engineering around the problem.
– Criggie
Nov 15 at 21:44










4 Answers
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31
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A resonant frequency encountered on a road surface would be for the whole bike system, i.e. frame, wheels, rider etc. The rider is effectively attached to the frame via elements with spring, damping and active control properties (arms and legs). Bumps encountered at a specific frequency might buck the rider off.



Bicycle frames are pretty stiff so any undamped resonant frequencies they have would be relatively high. Certain not at 10 or so Hertz you may get from riding on regularly spaced road bumps.



You assume that all structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies. This is plainly not true, otherwise acoustic musical instruments would self destruct when played. There certainly are structures where resonances can contribute to damaging oscillations of course, but I don't think bicycle frames suffer from this.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
    – Andrew Henle
    Nov 15 at 14:04






  • 6




    1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
    – cmaster
    Nov 15 at 15:53






  • 10




    @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
    – Argenti Apparatus
    Nov 15 at 17:15








  • 2




    It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 17:54






  • 1




    Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
    – Eric Duminil
    Nov 16 at 10:19


















up vote
12
down vote













There is a phenomenon called Speed wobbles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_wobble that can cause a loss of control of the bicycle. A speed wobble is "a quick (4–10 Hz) oscillation of primarily just the steerable wheel(s) of a vehicle. Initially, the rest of the vehicle remains mostly unaffected, until translated into a vehicle yaw oscillation of increasing amplitude producing loss of control". The frame will not brake, but due to the loss of control a catastrophic crash at high speed could occur.



The question is, whether those strips can induce these oscillations and I do not have an answer for that. There are probably enough perturbations of many frequencies present all the time and the main problem is to induce the instability, no to get the initial perturbation.



You can see a nice video of a bicyclist getting a speed wobble at









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  • Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 17:56










  • I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
    – Pere
    Nov 15 at 19:14






  • 5




    While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
    – Carel
    Nov 15 at 22:14










  • @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 16 at 17:25


















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Resonance frequency is an unchangeable design feature. But it's rather unlikely that it will destroy the frame, at least one from a reputable builder. I would not make the same statement for a BSO which might suffer from weak welding and poor material.



What you experienced on this stretch of road however might not have been proper frame resonance but rather resonance of the system bike/rider that causes a lot of discomfort. The way to deal with it depends on the type of bicycle, sprung or unsprung. And if it is sprung, adjusting the setting of the dampers will help a lot. After all it is part of their job.



With a rigid frame and fork the resonance frequency is given by the design and the frame material. The only bit that can be changed here would be the tyre size within the limits given by the largest fitting size. And to some extent by the tyre pressure.



There's still the option of going much faster or much slower, as you would do on a corrugated road with a motor vehicle. If you have had that opportunity it means either flying over the ripples at speed or following them with no speed at all.



Also, take a relaxed position on your bike. Don't grab the bar too tightly and lift your bottom slightly to keep more pressure on the pedals with the cranks horizontal.



(Last, but not least the purpose of these stripes is to slow down traffic, unfortunately they tend to cause more discomfort to cyclists and interfere with a safe trajectory than to car drivers who might just be annoyed by the noise.)






share|improve this answer

















  • 4




    Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
    – leftaroundabout
    Nov 15 at 16:18




















up vote
4
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Below are a couple of hypothetical graphs of the response of a bike to being acted on by a driving force at a particular frequency.



enter image description here



The unrealistic one on the left is the kind of graph that would lead to the pop-culture scenario where the bike breaks apart due to resonance. The resonance has to be at a pretty low frequency to match the frequency of the bumps in the road. There is very little damping (internal friction in the bike-rider system), and this shows up in two ways: (1) as you'd expect intuitively, the response is higher because energy isn't being dissipated rapidly into heat; (2) less intuitively, it makes the resonance peak very narrow.



The second graph is more like what I would expect for a system like a bike frame coupled to a rider's body. Because the frame is a complicated object, it has many resonant frequencies, not just one, and each one is fairly weak. I expect that the resonant frequencies would be rather high, probably 100-1000 Hz, and higher, because the frame is stiff and light. There is a lot of damping, due to coupling of the frame to the rider's soft squishy body, coupling to the tires, and possibly also due to internal friction in the frame. This damping makes the peaks not very tall, and also makes them wide, so they blend together.



If you want some experimental evidence about this, take your bike and bang on it with your fist in various spots and in various directions. (I guess you want to do this while sitting on it, since your body affects the system with its mass and damping.) If there are resonances in the audio region, you'll hear those frequencies as audible sound. If there are low-frequency resonances, you'll feel those as vibration. You can tell the amount of damping based on how long the ringing sustains. If it rings like a bell, you have low damping. If it's a quick thud or "dink" that immediately drops off, you have high damping.



Even if you assume the worst-case scenario of the left-hand graph, the peak is very narrow. (To make it tall enough to destroy the bike, we have to make damping low enough so that the width becomes very small.) This means that the hazard would occur only at a very, very specific, small range of frequencies. I think if most of us experienced this while riding, we would instinctively slow down a little. That would cause the driving frequency to drop and immediately take us too far from the resonant frequency to excite any significant response.



Designers clearly would not want to make a bike that would vibrate with low damping in response to a vertical force from a bump in the road. Such a bike would oscillate up and down for a long time, which would be annoying. Even in the case of a mountain bike that has shock absorbers, there is probably a ton of damping designed into the shocks in order to avoid just this kind of effect.






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    4 Answers
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    4 Answers
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    A resonant frequency encountered on a road surface would be for the whole bike system, i.e. frame, wheels, rider etc. The rider is effectively attached to the frame via elements with spring, damping and active control properties (arms and legs). Bumps encountered at a specific frequency might buck the rider off.



    Bicycle frames are pretty stiff so any undamped resonant frequencies they have would be relatively high. Certain not at 10 or so Hertz you may get from riding on regularly spaced road bumps.



    You assume that all structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies. This is plainly not true, otherwise acoustic musical instruments would self destruct when played. There certainly are structures where resonances can contribute to damaging oscillations of course, but I don't think bicycle frames suffer from this.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
      – Andrew Henle
      Nov 15 at 14:04






    • 6




      1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
      – cmaster
      Nov 15 at 15:53






    • 10




      @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
      – Argenti Apparatus
      Nov 15 at 17:15








    • 2




      It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:54






    • 1




      Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
      – Eric Duminil
      Nov 16 at 10:19















    up vote
    31
    down vote













    A resonant frequency encountered on a road surface would be for the whole bike system, i.e. frame, wheels, rider etc. The rider is effectively attached to the frame via elements with spring, damping and active control properties (arms and legs). Bumps encountered at a specific frequency might buck the rider off.



    Bicycle frames are pretty stiff so any undamped resonant frequencies they have would be relatively high. Certain not at 10 or so Hertz you may get from riding on regularly spaced road bumps.



    You assume that all structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies. This is plainly not true, otherwise acoustic musical instruments would self destruct when played. There certainly are structures where resonances can contribute to damaging oscillations of course, but I don't think bicycle frames suffer from this.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
      – Andrew Henle
      Nov 15 at 14:04






    • 6




      1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
      – cmaster
      Nov 15 at 15:53






    • 10




      @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
      – Argenti Apparatus
      Nov 15 at 17:15








    • 2




      It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:54






    • 1




      Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
      – Eric Duminil
      Nov 16 at 10:19













    up vote
    31
    down vote










    up vote
    31
    down vote









    A resonant frequency encountered on a road surface would be for the whole bike system, i.e. frame, wheels, rider etc. The rider is effectively attached to the frame via elements with spring, damping and active control properties (arms and legs). Bumps encountered at a specific frequency might buck the rider off.



    Bicycle frames are pretty stiff so any undamped resonant frequencies they have would be relatively high. Certain not at 10 or so Hertz you may get from riding on regularly spaced road bumps.



    You assume that all structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies. This is plainly not true, otherwise acoustic musical instruments would self destruct when played. There certainly are structures where resonances can contribute to damaging oscillations of course, but I don't think bicycle frames suffer from this.






    share|improve this answer














    A resonant frequency encountered on a road surface would be for the whole bike system, i.e. frame, wheels, rider etc. The rider is effectively attached to the frame via elements with spring, damping and active control properties (arms and legs). Bumps encountered at a specific frequency might buck the rider off.



    Bicycle frames are pretty stiff so any undamped resonant frequencies they have would be relatively high. Certain not at 10 or so Hertz you may get from riding on regularly spaced road bumps.



    You assume that all structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies. This is plainly not true, otherwise acoustic musical instruments would self destruct when played. There certainly are structures where resonances can contribute to damaging oscillations of course, but I don't think bicycle frames suffer from this.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 16 at 18:21

























    answered Nov 15 at 13:34









    Argenti Apparatus

    30.6k23479




    30.6k23479








    • 1




      structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
      – Andrew Henle
      Nov 15 at 14:04






    • 6




      1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
      – cmaster
      Nov 15 at 15:53






    • 10




      @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
      – Argenti Apparatus
      Nov 15 at 17:15








    • 2




      It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:54






    • 1




      Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
      – Eric Duminil
      Nov 16 at 10:19














    • 1




      structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
      – Andrew Henle
      Nov 15 at 14:04






    • 6




      1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
      – cmaster
      Nov 15 at 15:53






    • 10




      @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
      – Argenti Apparatus
      Nov 15 at 17:15








    • 2




      It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:54






    • 1




      Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
      – Eric Duminil
      Nov 16 at 10:19








    1




    1




    structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
    – Andrew Henle
    Nov 15 at 14:04




    structures fail when excited at resonant frequencies Movie bicycles do that...
    – Andrew Henle
    Nov 15 at 14:04




    6




    6




    1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
    – cmaster
    Nov 15 at 15:53




    1) Musical instruments are built to handle the vibrations well, 2) they are not built to resonate with their strings/rods/air-columns, they are built to provide a controlled coupling of the material vibrations into the air (neither too much, nor too little, usually with large structures that do not need to move much themselves - too much resonance quenches sustain), 3) the amount of vibrational power that's available is very limited. That's musical instruments, not vehicles or other load bearing structures. Bridges have collapsed because they were exited at their resonant frequencies...
    – cmaster
    Nov 15 at 15:53




    10




    10




    @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
    – Argenti Apparatus
    Nov 15 at 17:15






    @cmaster I was being a bit sarcastic, but the point is that resonance =/= destruction. It is a contributing factor but there also needs to be enough power input to damage the structure. E.g ringing a wineglass does not cause it to shatter but high enough sound power at the same frequency can.
    – Argenti Apparatus
    Nov 15 at 17:15






    2




    2




    It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 17:54




    It needs to be noted that the standard bike frame is quite stiff in the vertical direction, but quite flexible in the horizontal. Control issues arise when horizontal oscillations occur, as it affects steering and makes handling extremely difficult.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 17:54




    1




    1




    Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
    – Eric Duminil
    Nov 16 at 10:19




    Here's an example of a bicycle failing because of vibrations : youtube.com/watch?v=Vj3bjbWSvwU Warning : hard crash and injured biker.
    – Eric Duminil
    Nov 16 at 10:19










    up vote
    12
    down vote













    There is a phenomenon called Speed wobbles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_wobble that can cause a loss of control of the bicycle. A speed wobble is "a quick (4–10 Hz) oscillation of primarily just the steerable wheel(s) of a vehicle. Initially, the rest of the vehicle remains mostly unaffected, until translated into a vehicle yaw oscillation of increasing amplitude producing loss of control". The frame will not brake, but due to the loss of control a catastrophic crash at high speed could occur.



    The question is, whether those strips can induce these oscillations and I do not have an answer for that. There are probably enough perturbations of many frequencies present all the time and the main problem is to induce the instability, no to get the initial perturbation.



    You can see a nice video of a bicyclist getting a speed wobble at









    share|improve this answer





















    • Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:56










    • I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
      – Pere
      Nov 15 at 19:14






    • 5




      While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
      – Carel
      Nov 15 at 22:14










    • @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 16 at 17:25















    up vote
    12
    down vote













    There is a phenomenon called Speed wobbles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_wobble that can cause a loss of control of the bicycle. A speed wobble is "a quick (4–10 Hz) oscillation of primarily just the steerable wheel(s) of a vehicle. Initially, the rest of the vehicle remains mostly unaffected, until translated into a vehicle yaw oscillation of increasing amplitude producing loss of control". The frame will not brake, but due to the loss of control a catastrophic crash at high speed could occur.



    The question is, whether those strips can induce these oscillations and I do not have an answer for that. There are probably enough perturbations of many frequencies present all the time and the main problem is to induce the instability, no to get the initial perturbation.



    You can see a nice video of a bicyclist getting a speed wobble at









    share|improve this answer





















    • Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:56










    • I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
      – Pere
      Nov 15 at 19:14






    • 5




      While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
      – Carel
      Nov 15 at 22:14










    • @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 16 at 17:25













    up vote
    12
    down vote










    up vote
    12
    down vote









    There is a phenomenon called Speed wobbles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_wobble that can cause a loss of control of the bicycle. A speed wobble is "a quick (4–10 Hz) oscillation of primarily just the steerable wheel(s) of a vehicle. Initially, the rest of the vehicle remains mostly unaffected, until translated into a vehicle yaw oscillation of increasing amplitude producing loss of control". The frame will not brake, but due to the loss of control a catastrophic crash at high speed could occur.



    The question is, whether those strips can induce these oscillations and I do not have an answer for that. There are probably enough perturbations of many frequencies present all the time and the main problem is to induce the instability, no to get the initial perturbation.



    You can see a nice video of a bicyclist getting a speed wobble at









    share|improve this answer












    There is a phenomenon called Speed wobbles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_wobble that can cause a loss of control of the bicycle. A speed wobble is "a quick (4–10 Hz) oscillation of primarily just the steerable wheel(s) of a vehicle. Initially, the rest of the vehicle remains mostly unaffected, until translated into a vehicle yaw oscillation of increasing amplitude producing loss of control". The frame will not brake, but due to the loss of control a catastrophic crash at high speed could occur.



    The question is, whether those strips can induce these oscillations and I do not have an answer for that. There are probably enough perturbations of many frequencies present all the time and the main problem is to induce the instability, no to get the initial perturbation.



    You can see a nice video of a bicyclist getting a speed wobble at


















    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Nov 15 at 14:38









    Vladimir F

    25518




    25518












    • Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:56










    • I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
      – Pere
      Nov 15 at 19:14






    • 5




      While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
      – Carel
      Nov 15 at 22:14










    • @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 16 at 17:25


















    • Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 15 at 17:56










    • I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
      – Pere
      Nov 15 at 19:14






    • 5




      While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
      – Carel
      Nov 15 at 22:14










    • @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
      – Daniel R Hicks
      Nov 16 at 17:25
















    Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 17:56




    Precisely! This is the sort oscillation one needs to be concerned with.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 15 at 17:56












    I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
    – Pere
    Nov 15 at 19:14




    I suggest start viewing the video from second 0:27.
    – Pere
    Nov 15 at 19:14




    5




    5




    While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
    – Carel
    Nov 15 at 22:14




    While this sort of shimmy can be rather annoying and even dangerous it is not caused by road condition. The cause lies in the geometry of the bike, the repartition of weight and most importantly in mechanical adjustment, especially the steering. It also happens in a specific range of speeds only, nothing below and nothing above.
    – Carel
    Nov 15 at 22:14












    @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 16 at 17:25




    @Carel - I have certainly had shimmy triggered by road conditions.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Nov 16 at 17:25










    up vote
    5
    down vote













    Resonance frequency is an unchangeable design feature. But it's rather unlikely that it will destroy the frame, at least one from a reputable builder. I would not make the same statement for a BSO which might suffer from weak welding and poor material.



    What you experienced on this stretch of road however might not have been proper frame resonance but rather resonance of the system bike/rider that causes a lot of discomfort. The way to deal with it depends on the type of bicycle, sprung or unsprung. And if it is sprung, adjusting the setting of the dampers will help a lot. After all it is part of their job.



    With a rigid frame and fork the resonance frequency is given by the design and the frame material. The only bit that can be changed here would be the tyre size within the limits given by the largest fitting size. And to some extent by the tyre pressure.



    There's still the option of going much faster or much slower, as you would do on a corrugated road with a motor vehicle. If you have had that opportunity it means either flying over the ripples at speed or following them with no speed at all.



    Also, take a relaxed position on your bike. Don't grab the bar too tightly and lift your bottom slightly to keep more pressure on the pedals with the cranks horizontal.



    (Last, but not least the purpose of these stripes is to slow down traffic, unfortunately they tend to cause more discomfort to cyclists and interfere with a safe trajectory than to car drivers who might just be annoyed by the noise.)






    share|improve this answer

















    • 4




      Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
      – leftaroundabout
      Nov 15 at 16:18

















    up vote
    5
    down vote













    Resonance frequency is an unchangeable design feature. But it's rather unlikely that it will destroy the frame, at least one from a reputable builder. I would not make the same statement for a BSO which might suffer from weak welding and poor material.



    What you experienced on this stretch of road however might not have been proper frame resonance but rather resonance of the system bike/rider that causes a lot of discomfort. The way to deal with it depends on the type of bicycle, sprung or unsprung. And if it is sprung, adjusting the setting of the dampers will help a lot. After all it is part of their job.



    With a rigid frame and fork the resonance frequency is given by the design and the frame material. The only bit that can be changed here would be the tyre size within the limits given by the largest fitting size. And to some extent by the tyre pressure.



    There's still the option of going much faster or much slower, as you would do on a corrugated road with a motor vehicle. If you have had that opportunity it means either flying over the ripples at speed or following them with no speed at all.



    Also, take a relaxed position on your bike. Don't grab the bar too tightly and lift your bottom slightly to keep more pressure on the pedals with the cranks horizontal.



    (Last, but not least the purpose of these stripes is to slow down traffic, unfortunately they tend to cause more discomfort to cyclists and interfere with a safe trajectory than to car drivers who might just be annoyed by the noise.)






    share|improve this answer

















    • 4




      Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
      – leftaroundabout
      Nov 15 at 16:18















    up vote
    5
    down vote










    up vote
    5
    down vote









    Resonance frequency is an unchangeable design feature. But it's rather unlikely that it will destroy the frame, at least one from a reputable builder. I would not make the same statement for a BSO which might suffer from weak welding and poor material.



    What you experienced on this stretch of road however might not have been proper frame resonance but rather resonance of the system bike/rider that causes a lot of discomfort. The way to deal with it depends on the type of bicycle, sprung or unsprung. And if it is sprung, adjusting the setting of the dampers will help a lot. After all it is part of their job.



    With a rigid frame and fork the resonance frequency is given by the design and the frame material. The only bit that can be changed here would be the tyre size within the limits given by the largest fitting size. And to some extent by the tyre pressure.



    There's still the option of going much faster or much slower, as you would do on a corrugated road with a motor vehicle. If you have had that opportunity it means either flying over the ripples at speed or following them with no speed at all.



    Also, take a relaxed position on your bike. Don't grab the bar too tightly and lift your bottom slightly to keep more pressure on the pedals with the cranks horizontal.



    (Last, but not least the purpose of these stripes is to slow down traffic, unfortunately they tend to cause more discomfort to cyclists and interfere with a safe trajectory than to car drivers who might just be annoyed by the noise.)






    share|improve this answer












    Resonance frequency is an unchangeable design feature. But it's rather unlikely that it will destroy the frame, at least one from a reputable builder. I would not make the same statement for a BSO which might suffer from weak welding and poor material.



    What you experienced on this stretch of road however might not have been proper frame resonance but rather resonance of the system bike/rider that causes a lot of discomfort. The way to deal with it depends on the type of bicycle, sprung or unsprung. And if it is sprung, adjusting the setting of the dampers will help a lot. After all it is part of their job.



    With a rigid frame and fork the resonance frequency is given by the design and the frame material. The only bit that can be changed here would be the tyre size within the limits given by the largest fitting size. And to some extent by the tyre pressure.



    There's still the option of going much faster or much slower, as you would do on a corrugated road with a motor vehicle. If you have had that opportunity it means either flying over the ripples at speed or following them with no speed at all.



    Also, take a relaxed position on your bike. Don't grab the bar too tightly and lift your bottom slightly to keep more pressure on the pedals with the cranks horizontal.



    (Last, but not least the purpose of these stripes is to slow down traffic, unfortunately they tend to cause more discomfort to cyclists and interfere with a safe trajectory than to car drivers who might just be annoyed by the noise.)







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Nov 15 at 13:34









    Carel

    3,3391812




    3,3391812








    • 4




      Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
      – leftaroundabout
      Nov 15 at 16:18
















    • 4




      Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
      – leftaroundabout
      Nov 15 at 16:18










    4




    4




    Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
    – leftaroundabout
    Nov 15 at 16:18






    Most BSOs would have less sharp resonances than a good bike, because of the worse manufacturing tolerances. Lots of opportunities for friction to dissipate the energy into heat (and noise...). If such a bike fails, it has nothing to do with resonance.
    – leftaroundabout
    Nov 15 at 16:18












    up vote
    4
    down vote













    Below are a couple of hypothetical graphs of the response of a bike to being acted on by a driving force at a particular frequency.



    enter image description here



    The unrealistic one on the left is the kind of graph that would lead to the pop-culture scenario where the bike breaks apart due to resonance. The resonance has to be at a pretty low frequency to match the frequency of the bumps in the road. There is very little damping (internal friction in the bike-rider system), and this shows up in two ways: (1) as you'd expect intuitively, the response is higher because energy isn't being dissipated rapidly into heat; (2) less intuitively, it makes the resonance peak very narrow.



    The second graph is more like what I would expect for a system like a bike frame coupled to a rider's body. Because the frame is a complicated object, it has many resonant frequencies, not just one, and each one is fairly weak. I expect that the resonant frequencies would be rather high, probably 100-1000 Hz, and higher, because the frame is stiff and light. There is a lot of damping, due to coupling of the frame to the rider's soft squishy body, coupling to the tires, and possibly also due to internal friction in the frame. This damping makes the peaks not very tall, and also makes them wide, so they blend together.



    If you want some experimental evidence about this, take your bike and bang on it with your fist in various spots and in various directions. (I guess you want to do this while sitting on it, since your body affects the system with its mass and damping.) If there are resonances in the audio region, you'll hear those frequencies as audible sound. If there are low-frequency resonances, you'll feel those as vibration. You can tell the amount of damping based on how long the ringing sustains. If it rings like a bell, you have low damping. If it's a quick thud or "dink" that immediately drops off, you have high damping.



    Even if you assume the worst-case scenario of the left-hand graph, the peak is very narrow. (To make it tall enough to destroy the bike, we have to make damping low enough so that the width becomes very small.) This means that the hazard would occur only at a very, very specific, small range of frequencies. I think if most of us experienced this while riding, we would instinctively slow down a little. That would cause the driving frequency to drop and immediately take us too far from the resonant frequency to excite any significant response.



    Designers clearly would not want to make a bike that would vibrate with low damping in response to a vertical force from a bump in the road. Such a bike would oscillate up and down for a long time, which would be annoying. Even in the case of a mountain bike that has shock absorbers, there is probably a ton of damping designed into the shocks in order to avoid just this kind of effect.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      Below are a couple of hypothetical graphs of the response of a bike to being acted on by a driving force at a particular frequency.



      enter image description here



      The unrealistic one on the left is the kind of graph that would lead to the pop-culture scenario where the bike breaks apart due to resonance. The resonance has to be at a pretty low frequency to match the frequency of the bumps in the road. There is very little damping (internal friction in the bike-rider system), and this shows up in two ways: (1) as you'd expect intuitively, the response is higher because energy isn't being dissipated rapidly into heat; (2) less intuitively, it makes the resonance peak very narrow.



      The second graph is more like what I would expect for a system like a bike frame coupled to a rider's body. Because the frame is a complicated object, it has many resonant frequencies, not just one, and each one is fairly weak. I expect that the resonant frequencies would be rather high, probably 100-1000 Hz, and higher, because the frame is stiff and light. There is a lot of damping, due to coupling of the frame to the rider's soft squishy body, coupling to the tires, and possibly also due to internal friction in the frame. This damping makes the peaks not very tall, and also makes them wide, so they blend together.



      If you want some experimental evidence about this, take your bike and bang on it with your fist in various spots and in various directions. (I guess you want to do this while sitting on it, since your body affects the system with its mass and damping.) If there are resonances in the audio region, you'll hear those frequencies as audible sound. If there are low-frequency resonances, you'll feel those as vibration. You can tell the amount of damping based on how long the ringing sustains. If it rings like a bell, you have low damping. If it's a quick thud or "dink" that immediately drops off, you have high damping.



      Even if you assume the worst-case scenario of the left-hand graph, the peak is very narrow. (To make it tall enough to destroy the bike, we have to make damping low enough so that the width becomes very small.) This means that the hazard would occur only at a very, very specific, small range of frequencies. I think if most of us experienced this while riding, we would instinctively slow down a little. That would cause the driving frequency to drop and immediately take us too far from the resonant frequency to excite any significant response.



      Designers clearly would not want to make a bike that would vibrate with low damping in response to a vertical force from a bump in the road. Such a bike would oscillate up and down for a long time, which would be annoying. Even in the case of a mountain bike that has shock absorbers, there is probably a ton of damping designed into the shocks in order to avoid just this kind of effect.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        Below are a couple of hypothetical graphs of the response of a bike to being acted on by a driving force at a particular frequency.



        enter image description here



        The unrealistic one on the left is the kind of graph that would lead to the pop-culture scenario where the bike breaks apart due to resonance. The resonance has to be at a pretty low frequency to match the frequency of the bumps in the road. There is very little damping (internal friction in the bike-rider system), and this shows up in two ways: (1) as you'd expect intuitively, the response is higher because energy isn't being dissipated rapidly into heat; (2) less intuitively, it makes the resonance peak very narrow.



        The second graph is more like what I would expect for a system like a bike frame coupled to a rider's body. Because the frame is a complicated object, it has many resonant frequencies, not just one, and each one is fairly weak. I expect that the resonant frequencies would be rather high, probably 100-1000 Hz, and higher, because the frame is stiff and light. There is a lot of damping, due to coupling of the frame to the rider's soft squishy body, coupling to the tires, and possibly also due to internal friction in the frame. This damping makes the peaks not very tall, and also makes them wide, so they blend together.



        If you want some experimental evidence about this, take your bike and bang on it with your fist in various spots and in various directions. (I guess you want to do this while sitting on it, since your body affects the system with its mass and damping.) If there are resonances in the audio region, you'll hear those frequencies as audible sound. If there are low-frequency resonances, you'll feel those as vibration. You can tell the amount of damping based on how long the ringing sustains. If it rings like a bell, you have low damping. If it's a quick thud or "dink" that immediately drops off, you have high damping.



        Even if you assume the worst-case scenario of the left-hand graph, the peak is very narrow. (To make it tall enough to destroy the bike, we have to make damping low enough so that the width becomes very small.) This means that the hazard would occur only at a very, very specific, small range of frequencies. I think if most of us experienced this while riding, we would instinctively slow down a little. That would cause the driving frequency to drop and immediately take us too far from the resonant frequency to excite any significant response.



        Designers clearly would not want to make a bike that would vibrate with low damping in response to a vertical force from a bump in the road. Such a bike would oscillate up and down for a long time, which would be annoying. Even in the case of a mountain bike that has shock absorbers, there is probably a ton of damping designed into the shocks in order to avoid just this kind of effect.






        share|improve this answer












        Below are a couple of hypothetical graphs of the response of a bike to being acted on by a driving force at a particular frequency.



        enter image description here



        The unrealistic one on the left is the kind of graph that would lead to the pop-culture scenario where the bike breaks apart due to resonance. The resonance has to be at a pretty low frequency to match the frequency of the bumps in the road. There is very little damping (internal friction in the bike-rider system), and this shows up in two ways: (1) as you'd expect intuitively, the response is higher because energy isn't being dissipated rapidly into heat; (2) less intuitively, it makes the resonance peak very narrow.



        The second graph is more like what I would expect for a system like a bike frame coupled to a rider's body. Because the frame is a complicated object, it has many resonant frequencies, not just one, and each one is fairly weak. I expect that the resonant frequencies would be rather high, probably 100-1000 Hz, and higher, because the frame is stiff and light. There is a lot of damping, due to coupling of the frame to the rider's soft squishy body, coupling to the tires, and possibly also due to internal friction in the frame. This damping makes the peaks not very tall, and also makes them wide, so they blend together.



        If you want some experimental evidence about this, take your bike and bang on it with your fist in various spots and in various directions. (I guess you want to do this while sitting on it, since your body affects the system with its mass and damping.) If there are resonances in the audio region, you'll hear those frequencies as audible sound. If there are low-frequency resonances, you'll feel those as vibration. You can tell the amount of damping based on how long the ringing sustains. If it rings like a bell, you have low damping. If it's a quick thud or "dink" that immediately drops off, you have high damping.



        Even if you assume the worst-case scenario of the left-hand graph, the peak is very narrow. (To make it tall enough to destroy the bike, we have to make damping low enough so that the width becomes very small.) This means that the hazard would occur only at a very, very specific, small range of frequencies. I think if most of us experienced this while riding, we would instinctively slow down a little. That would cause the driving frequency to drop and immediately take us too far from the resonant frequency to excite any significant response.



        Designers clearly would not want to make a bike that would vibrate with low damping in response to a vertical force from a bump in the road. Such a bike would oscillate up and down for a long time, which would be annoying. Even in the case of a mountain bike that has shock absorbers, there is probably a ton of damping designed into the shocks in order to avoid just this kind of effect.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 16 at 14:43









        Ben Crowell

        3806




        3806






























             

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