« First Sign of Campagnolo Bike Technology for 2006 | Main | Trying SplashID on My Treo to Keep Track of Passwords »

Measuring the Steepness of Hills on Cycling Routes

The other day I alluded to the posted grade of a hill between New Hope and Wrightstown, PA. In the course of trying to figure the actual grade of the hill myself, I found Measuring the Hilliness of Routes which is part of Ken and Sharon Roberts' Bike Hudson Valley website. This page contains the formula for calculating the grade of a hill as well as something called a "hill index" which is an attempt to put a number on the average hillyness or steepness of a cycling route.

You'd think that a Rensselaer graduate like me would be able to accurately estimate that a hill that rises 257 feet in a mile (courtesy of my Garmin Forerunner 201) would be a 4.8% grade. I wanted to make sure I was computing this correctly because I thought the sign on the other side of the road indicated that the hill was even steeper.

I could have sworn that I saw a sign on PA 232 that said the hill going down into New Hope was 9%. Was I so out of it as I reached the top the climb of the year that I couldn't read the sign correctly as I glanced over my shoulder?

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.operationgadget.com/spamfw.php?tb_id=127

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Got a tip for Operation Gadget?

Copyright © 2003-2006, Chatham Township Data Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

"Operation Gadget" is a service mark of Chatham Township Data Corporation.

All other products and company names mentioned on Operation Gadget may be trademarks of their respective owners. Any comments posted to Operation Gadget are the legal responsibility of the person that posted them. Comments may be removed from this system at any time, at the sole discretion of Chatham Township Data Corporation or its authorized agents.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.2

Site designed by Weblog Improvement