Tech News June 29, 2004
Edited by John Stevenson
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Zipp to roll out fast new wheel for Tour prologue
Zipp's new 808 deep-rim aero wheel
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When the Tour de France prologue rolls out in Ličge on Saturday, Tyler
Hamilton and other riders sponsored by US aero wheel maestros Zipp will
have a new weapon in their arsenal, a wheel that Zipp claims is worth
16-17 seconds over 40km, the new 808.
If that doesn't sound like a vast amount, compared to the gains made
in aero components in the past, that reflects just how good modern aerodynamic
components have become, according to Zipp design and development engineer
Josh Poertner. "There is great difficulty finding improvements in the
bike-rider system as all the components become so specialized," says Poertner.
"Everybody wants to have a product that will save you a minute in 40km,
but the reality is that there is no one minute left. The drag numbers
are so low and the top products are so good, that major improvements in
a single component are rather small in the big picture. But then again,
17 seconds could also be really huge depending on the situation."
Lest anyone forget, Tours de France have been won by smaller margins
- Greg LeMond's eight-second victory over Laurent Fignon in 1989 is the
most famous example. And Poertner's not talking about a 17-second improvement
compared to a regular spoked wheel, but an advantage over three-spoke
wheels or Zipp's own 404 wheel.
Air flow over a straight-sided
60mm rim
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Air flow over Zipp's 404
rim
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Air flow over the new 808
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Two technologies give the new wheel its extra turn of speed, and both
are notions that Zipp has been working on for some time, given a final
push into reality by Tyler Hamilton's riding in last year's Tour. "We
were all enthralled with the Tour, and really overwhelmed by the courage
and performance that Tyler put in. I remember watching the final TT and
thinking that Tyler, Jan and Lance were all riding wheels which, despite
looking dramatically different, were all pretty similar in performance,
based on our wind tunnel data from the previous winter."
The first important new aspect of the 808 rim is the shape. Instead of
having a bulge with parallel sidewalls at the brake track, the 808 has
a smooth, uniform bulge that incorporates the tyre into the shape of the
rim so that air flows smoothly over the whole assembly.
The enemy aerodynamic designers are always trying to combat is drag.
The Holy Grail is persuade air to flow smoothly over a surface, without
breaking away and splitting up into the eddies that cause drag. The 808's
design reduces drag by keeping the flow attached to the rim. This is an
improvement on Zipp's previous 404 design, where the air flow breals away
as it passes over the flat brake track, then reattahces at the bulge.
"By blending the rim shape into the tire, we instantly eliminated a lot
of issues, particularly the problems associated with air separation off
of the tire itself," says Poertner. "Most straight sided and V shaped
rims will never really see the airflow, because the tire causes the air
to separate, and the rim sort of drafts in the tire wake. These designs
can still be more aerodynamic than traditional wheels as they use fewer
spokes, and the spokes are shorter, but you will never truly optimize
the whole wheel as a system."
The other weapon in the 808's armoury is one that's instantly familiar
to anyone who's ever played golf: dimples. A dimpled golf ball travels
further than a smooth one because the dimples keep the flow of air over
the ball attached for longer, reducing the drag-causing eddies behind
the ball. Zipp introduced a dimpled disc wheel a couple of years ago,
and Poertner and his team have found that a dimpled rim has big advantages
in cross-winds.
"Once we had a design which allowed the air to flow on the rim surface
even at low angles, we knew that the dimples would make the thing faster
by allowing the air to remain on the contour throughout the rest of the
flow. Most rims show flow separation at 2-5 degrees, and this separation
causes drastic increases in drag, whereas with the 808 design, we were
in the wind tunnel seeing attached flow at 15 degrees."
Poertner doesn't believe riders will use a wheel with a section this
big - the 808's rim is 60mm deep - in extremely windy situations, so that
15 degree angle fits the intended use for the wheel, as a even relatively
strong cross-wind doesn't 'appear' to the wheel to come at an angle greater
than 20 degrees.
Nevertheless, figuring out how to actually manufacture the bulged, dimpled
rim proved challenging. "Since nobody had ever attempted anything like
this before, we had to not only design and develop the rim, but then figure
out how in the world to make the tooling that we needed, not at all an
easy task," says Zipp president Andy Ording. "The disc tooling is nearly
crazy to manufacture, taking hundreds of hours, so we really had our work
cut out for us in dimpling not just a flat tool, but one with a highly
complex curvature."
Ording and Poertner claim the end result is worth it. The 808 performs
as well or better than a disc out to 13 degrees of yaw (wind angle), they
say.
For the team at Zipp, it's about returning the inspiration that riders
such as Tyler Hamilton provide. "I want our athletes to know that they
have the fastest, lightest wheels in the world," says Poertner, adding
with a sly nod at one of his favourite movies, "I want them to realize
that they can take their performance to the highest level - they can turn
it up to 11!"
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