Why was Filippo Ganna's Tirreno-Adriatico team car stacked with spare bikes?
Aero explꦯoit gives Ganna and Evenepoel marginal gains in time trial opener






Monday's opening time trial at 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tirreno-Adriatico, a no-frills, pan-flat run up and down Lido di Camaiore's coastal road, passed largely without surprise on the results sheet. World time trial champion 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Filippo Ganna romped to victory, finishing 11 seconds clear of Remco Evenepoel and a further seven ahead of Tadej Pogačar, the week's GC battle left poised in the Italian's wake.
However, looking beyond the power and precision of the⛎ Italian's 17th career timꦜe trial victory, spotted something amiss – an abundance of spare bikes stacked atop the team car following him during the stage.
Ganna's 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Ineos Grenadiers team weren't preparing for a Michael Rasmus🎶sen-esque calam💮ity on the 13.9-kilometre course, though – instead they were simply optimising their star rider's aerodynamics.
QuickStep-AlphaVinyl did the same in the car behind Evenepoel, too, while the car following fourth-placed Kasper Asgreen had five bikes on the roof. Meanwhile, the cars of Pogačar and fifth-placed Dowsett held only a standard single spare bike.
The exploit is not against UCI regulations – which don't legislate for the number of spare bikes atop a team car – and is also seemingly not a brand new one conjured up by Ineos' 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:newly added aero expert Dan Bigham. Cyclingnews has pored through photo and video archives and found that, since the 💯final stage of the 2021 Giro d'Italia onwards, Ganna has made ꦫthe switch from one or two spare bikes to the plethora seen on Monday.
In fact, he has had a bike🎶-laden team car following him at 💞three out of the four time trials he has raced for Ineos since – at the Etoile de Bessèges, the Tour de la Provence, and on Monday.
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Gann🔴a has, of course, won each of those stages &ꦡndash; but what kind of gains can time trialists make from being followed by a car with bikes packed on the roof rack? And how does the science of it all work?
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct 🧸to your inbo💮x!
Cyclingnews spoke to Richard Kelso – Adjunct Associate Pr🐟ofessor at the University of Adelaide with specialities in fluid mechanics, aerodynamics, and sports engineering – to find out.
Kelso, whose aero expertise has seen him collaborate with AusCycling's track team since 2008 and design several helmets with Kask and Scott, told Cyclingnews that – in addition to the well-known slipstream effect gained by following a vehicle – having a vehicle follow a rider al💜so gives an aerodynamic benefit.
"I think the way it's normally explained is that any object moving through the air pushes air with i༒t," Kels🅷o said. "The pressure distribution around the object – in this case, the car – leads to the air immediately in front being pushed forwards slightly.
"So, it means that the larger vehicle behind or the vehicle behind the cyclist will actually be pushing the air ahead with the cyclist, so that the airflow speed around the cyclist will be smaller. It is only smꦉall but it's enough [to make a difference]."
Like any o♕bject moving through the air, riders and follow cars create pressure fields, with a high-pressure area at theไ front and a low-pressure area at the rear. The difference between the two is what creates drag.
Logically, then, with one object (in this case, a car following at the UCI-regulated 10-metre gap during time trials) following another, the follow car and its leading high-press🎀ure zone will then have an effect on the rider's rear low-pressure zone, thus reducing that drag.
"Depending on how far the cyclist is ahead, the cyclist will be sitting in ♛that zone where the air is being pushed ahead with the car," explained Kelso.
"The maximum effect is right in front of the car, where the air is essentially moving with the car, and the ♎minimum effect is at an infinite distance ahead of the car. So, at 10 metres ahead there's a very small favourable wind moving with the cyclist, but it's still enough to produce that reduction in drag."
Kelso went on to qu𒀰ote Belgian professor Bert Blocken, who has done much of the small amount of research into this very subject, when explaining what benefits a follow car at 10 metres would have on a rider.
"He found that, for a car following at 10 metres, the drag reduction is about 0.23 per cent on drag coefficie🌊nt, and that translates to 3.9 seconds over 50 kilometres. So, for this 14-kilometre circuit it's roughly one second."
That second, then, is what the Pogačars and Dowsetts of the peloton would potentially have gained in Lido di Camaiore. Though the 'wall' of bikes on top of the follow cars behind Ganna and Evenepoel will have only created an additional beneficial effect, said Kelso.
"With the bikes stacked up on the top, the vehicle effectively looks more like a box truck, and in broad terms it's virtually like having a vehicle of double the height. If ▨the bikes are tightly packed enough and all the gaps between 🐠them are small enough, it'll be a significant blockage to the airflow.
"Basically, if you want to get the maximum effect, you'd want something with the aerodynamics and shape of a brick. A flat front, sharp edges, that kind of thing in order to maximise the drag of the following vehicle, because that will have the maximum effect on t♍he air ahead." Kelso added, in respo𝓰nse to Israel-Premier Tech performance coach that his team would use a team bus to follow Dowsett in future.
Kelso concluded tha♍t, for Ganna and Evenepoel, the effect of having their follow cars stacked with bikes would likely have given them an added second of time, compared to their rivals.
"I would double those times given all the bikes on top," Kelso said. "You might be looking at maybe a couple of seconds. That's if the car is 10 metres 🍎behind for the whole distꦓance.
"I think it's pretty unlikely 👍that it would have made a difference to those results, but then of course nob🅰ody knows what the results are going to be until the race is done."
Ineos' and QuickStep's idea gained their riders a small advantage then, and any time 𝐆gain is a win, even if it wasn't necessarily a result-altering one. Nevertheless, their ploy has given us all something else 𝓡to look out for in future time trials.
In the short term, though, Evenepoel may just end u🌠p very grateꩲful for that extra second or so come the end of Tirreno-Adriatico.
Ineos love Ganna. In the time trial they give him a cho🦄ice of 10 bikes, incase he needed one in a different size. Or did the team car want to get off for an early dart post Race?!?Nothing ꦕto do with aero at all. pic.twitter.com/knDi8EF2f5