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Please let us off the hook now JBell. Were you joking from the get go ? Just put the front wheel on the scales with a piece of wood under the rear the same height, then the same for the rear. Add the two. THAT REALLY IS IT !!! If you stand on a set of scales on one foot you still weigh the same, just on both feet, each one takes half the weight, but you had me sucked in for ages as well...
No, Huzo, no joke and no sinister motives. I was thinking you'd have to know the weight bias front/rear to calculate the one wheel at a time method. As so often happens, I am wrong again. I'll still have to get a 3-400# range scale but will give it a go on my bikes, enquiring minds want to know.
Take it to the airport and weigh it at an airfreight shipper. No charge, if you want to know how much to airfreight it .
Is that with your gear as well RK?I've seen Classic Racers being weighed one wheel at a time On scales and the other wheel was being elevated. Another option would be a Post/Parcel distribution centre, Iwas a Postie when I got the 1150 and weighed it at work.Maurie.
Nope, it's the bare trike with all fluids filled. No luggage or me.
Bought two $10/330# scales at WalMart. Set them at wheelbase with 2x4's in between to fill the gap and a little ramp up to the first one. First up, my 860GT came in at 470#. Next, the K75RT came in at 540#, both according to spec. When backing the K75 back down, a loud crack from the first scale and it is buggered up. Tried to reset and compensate for the difference in a known weight (me). 850 T3 came in at 475# plus throw in another 20# for mufflers for 495#. Not sure about this one, will get another scale and try again. Very surprised they came in what the manuals said, expected them to weigh heavier. First I tried with a plank across both the scales but that produced varying results and went to tires directly on the scales.
Hats off to you, jbell! Actual instrumentation acquired!Now you can test theories of the importance of having both wheels on the same level, even without buying another scale to replace the broken one. I hesitated to weigh in (ha ha) when the discussions were just theoretical, but now I'll present my own theory, the Sine/Cosine Theory.The Sine/Cosine Theory holds that physical problems of this sort can be solved by appeal to either the sine or cosine function, without any messing around with vectors or other actual mathematical analysis. The Theory says that as some relevant angle varies, the required measurement (a force, perhaps) is related either to its sine or cosine, whichever seems more appropriate.Here is my analysis of bike weighing using the Theory. If the bike is weighed with two scales while it is on the level, the front scale (e.g.) will show weight W1, which is usually about 50% of the total bike weight. That's the first proposition. The second proposition is that if the bike were rotated upward 90 degrees and stood on its rear wheel pointing straight up in the air, the weight on the front wheel's scale (if it could be positioned under the wheel) would be zero.Now the Theory comes into play. Since the cosine of zero degrees is 1, and the cosine of 90 degrees is 0, we use the Cosine codicil of the theory, and assert that the weight on the front wheel is equal to the cosine of the angle in question, times W1. Simple, right?Thereby I calculate that if the front wheel were on a bathroom scale 2 inches higher than the rear, and the wheelbase were about 58 inches, as is true for your T3, the angle in question would be sin-1(2/58) = 2 degrees, and the needed cosine would be cos(2 degrees) = .999. Therefore your T3's front wheel should weigh .999 times what it did when you had the bike level. You may need a somewhat more accurate scale to check my theoretical prediction with only a 2 inch difference in wheel elevations. Nonetheless I take pride in having offered a specific value rather than a loose generalization.You could test my theory more accurately by seeing what the front weighs when it is elevated 2 feet. The theory says the weight should be cos[sin-1(24/58)] = .91 times what it weighed when measured on the level. That would amount to about a (1 - .91)*(475/2) = 21 pound difference.The Sine/Cosine Theory is the certainly the most sublime and universally applicable of all physical theories, though it is only hit or miss when it comes to accuracy. I eagerly await your empirical results.If the measurement at a 2 foot elevation agrees with my theory, it would seem that no one needs to worry about a 2 inch elevation difference. This in turn would mean that none of us need to run out and buy a second scale to weigh our bikes. Scientific theorization coupled with empirical research will once again have worked in tandem to the benefit of all mankind!MotoP.S. To weigh the front wheel at a two-foot elevation, place the wheel on a bathroom scale sitting on an automotive hydraulic jack. Then raise the jack until the top surface of the scale is 24 inches above level, and note the weight it registers. Make sure to have someone hold the bike so it doesn't fall over.M.
EXCELLENT! could you make a youtube video of that?especially, The second proposition is that if the bike were rotated upward 90 degrees and stood on its rear wheel pointing straight up in the air
The (complete) second proposition is wrong, as I realized in an actual experiment.M.
you recorded it right? put on youtube OIDH.
(click on the image to see all 3 panes)
Someone post a pix of the Mr. Nevada tee.