Cycling Science: How Rider and Machine Work Together

Author:   Max Glaskin
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226924137


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   15 November 2012
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Cycling Science: How Rider and Machine Work Together


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Full Product Details

Author:   Max Glaskin
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 23.40cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 25.70cm
Weight:   0.953kg
ISBN:  

9780226924137


ISBN 10:   0226924130
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   15 November 2012
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

""Max Glaskin presents his ideas in a straightforward, user-friendly, and consistently informative and entertaining way. . . . Reading this book, be it from cover-to-cover or dipping into it as the mood takes you, can only enhance the experience of cycling, in whatever form you may take it.""-- ""Cycling Shorts"" 2013 Outstanding Academic Title-- ""Choice magazine"" ""This book explores everything from the aerodynamics of bicycle helmets to reaction times to finding the perfect bicycle frame, drawing on studies from disciplines such as physics, brain science, and biology. Its accessible format and broad range of topics make it well suited to satisfy the curiosity of the casual recreational rider, or even the hard-core cycling enthusiast.""-- ""Globe and Mail"" ""Usually, coffee-table books are for browsing and display. Here is an exception. This book has enough content to get the attention of readers--from those interested in bicycling as a mode of transportation to those who work out on bicycles to professional racers. . . . The excellent illustrations facilitate understanding of the operation of this least polluting of all mechanical systems of transportation. In six chapters, the author covers an enormous amount of material related to the materials, design, manufacture, and physics of the bicycle. There is nothing that is missing or out of place. . . . Highly recommended.""--N. Sadanand, Central Connecticut State University ""Choice"" ""Cycling Science by Max Glaskin guides readers through a wide variety of topics, from tyre rolling resistance and the difference between yield strength and ultimate strength, to the importance of aerodynamics and any impact that shaved legs have on speed.""-- ""Bikebiz.com"" ""For Cycling Science: How Rider and Machine Work Together, British cyclist and journalist Max Glaskin mined hundreds of scientific studies and academic papers for findings that he explains in accessible language. The book is organized around a series of questions and answers framed to educate professional and recreational riders as well as the scientifically curious. The questions range from the practical (What is the most efficient bike design?) to the speculative (Why might plasma be the future of bike materials?). Each answer is accompanied by a terrific set of infographics.""-- ""Boston Globe"" ""Max Glaskin's Cycling Science straddles the space between popular accounts typically found in cycling enthusiast magazines and the more academic treatments of David Gordon Wilson or Edmund Burke. It's a fairly large gap, but Glaskin spans it ably. Approaching its subject from the standpoints of both rider and machine, the book covers all the basics of human performance and how a two-wheeled conveyance converts that into the world's most efficient transportation system. Illustrations are perhaps the book's greatest strength: Prior to the back matter of notes, glossary and index, not a spread goes by without at least one.""--David Schoonmaker ""American Scientist""


Max Glaskin's Cycling Science straddles the space between popular accounts typically found in cycling enthusiast magazines and the more academic treatments of David Gordon Wilson or Edmund Burke. It's a fairly large gap, but Glaskin spans it ably. Approaching its subject from the standpoints of both rider and machine, the book covers all the basics of human performance and how a two-wheeled conveyance converts that into the world's most efficient transportation system. Illustrations are perhaps the book's greatest strength: Prior to the back matter of notes, glossary and index, not a spread goes by without at least one. --David Schoonmaker American Scientist


Usually, coffee-table books are for browsing and display. Here is an exception. This book has enough content to get the attention of readers--from those interested in bicycling as a mode of transportation to those who work out on bicycles to professional racers. . . . The excellent illustrations facilitate understanding of the operation of this least polluting of all mechanical systems of transportation. In six chapters, the author covers an enormous amount of material related to the materials, design, manufacture, and physics of the bicycle. There is nothing that is missing or out of place. . . . Highly recommended. --N. Sadanand, Central Connecticut State University Choice


Author Information

Max Glaskin is an award-winning science and technology journalist with a special interest in cycling. He has contributed to a vast range of publications, including New Scientist, Reader's Digest, and the Sunday Times.

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