Course Measurement and Certification Procedures
Calibrating the Bicycle
The pre-measurement calibration is the initial step that must be performed
in the measurement of a road course. The post-measurement calibration guards
against systematic sources of error such as a slow leak. At least four
pre-measurement and four post-measurement calibration rides are required.
- The bicycle tires should be inflated hard, to the pressure indicated on
the side of the tire.
- Warm the tires by riding the bicycle for several minutes immediately prior
to the calibration rides. This will reduce the variance in counts for the
pre-measurement calibration and ensure a better measurement.
- At one end point of the calibration course, slowly roll the front wheel
forward, just through the next count. Lock the front brake and place the
front wheel axle directly over the line. Record the count.
- Ride the bicycle over the calibration course in as straight a line as
possible and with the same weight and equipment on the bicycle as will be
used during the actual race course measurement. A calibration ride should be
one non-stop ride.
- Stop the bicycle just before reaching the end of the calibration course
and roll it slowly forward until the axle of the front wheel is directly
over the line. Lock the front brake and record the count.
- With the front wheel brake locked, turn the bicycle around and place the
front wheel axle directly over the line for the next ride. Repeat steps 4
and 5.
- Repeat the above procedure for a total of four rides, recording start and
finish counts each time. Alternate directions on the calibration course.
This will give you two rides in one direction and two rides in the opposite
direction.
- Add the results of each ride and divide by the number of rides. This gives
the "average pre-measurement count."
- Divide this count by the length of the calibration course in kilometers
(or in miles) to obtain the number of counts per kilometer (or per mile).
- Multiply this by 1.001 to obtain the working constant. The "short
course prevention factor" of 1.001 is intended to result in a course
which is at least the stated distance, within the limits of measurement
precision. It also helps ensure that (very) slight variations in the course
layout on race day won't invalidate your measurement. This lengthens the course
by one meter per kilometer or 5.28 feet per mile.
Now go measure the race course. When finished, return to the calibration course.
- The post-measurement calibration must be performed as soon after the course
measurement as possible. Repeat steps 3 through 10. Four post-measurement
calibration rides are required.
- Determine the average post-measurement count by adding all the
post-measurement counts and dividing by the number of rides.
- Determine the finish constant by dividing the average post-measurement
count by the length of the calibration course in kilometers (or in miles)
and multiply this by 1.001.
- The constant for the day is either the working constant or the finish
constant, whichever is larger. Although measurements using the average of
the working and finish constants will be accepted, it is strongly
recommended to use the larger constant.
Remember: Each day's measurement must be preceded and followed
by calibration runs. You may measure as much as you want in a day, just as long
as calibration closely precedes and follows measuring (within a few hours).
This is done to minimize error due to changes in tire pressure from thermal
expansion and slow leakage. Frequent recalibration "protects" the
previous measurement. A smart measurer will recalibrate frequently--you never
know when a flat tire is coming!