I’ve recently been doing a lot of research into power to weight ratios. This is a fairly transparent area where the underlying premise is quite simple to grasp; If Rider A weighs 140lbs and produces ‘x’ amount of power he’ll be faster than rider B who weighs 165 lbs even if rider B produces the same power. This of course depends on all other things being equal. If for example rider A is carrying 30lbs of groceries home from Tesco in his panniers, rider B would trounce him (although rider A would have a better dinner so it’s debateable which rider would be the happier.)
So, weight unquestionably affects performance. This got me to thinking about how body shape affects performance and so many other things in life. Take height for example. Have you noticed how all short people are depressed? That’s ‘depressed’ as in feeling low, not ‘compressed’ as in squashed smaller, which we've all noticed but are too polite to say anything. No, short people are always depressed and I think I’ve discovered why.
They don’t get as much sunlight as tall people. Tall people can see further round the curvature of the earth from their elevated position, which means that when the sun goes down, they can see it for longer than short people. And when it comes up again they get to see it first. It’s not much I know, maybe only a few microseconds every morning and evening, but add up all those microseconds, every day for your whole life and boy, that’s a whole bunch of extra sunlight that short guys are missing out on. And as we know sunlight is a major contributor to happiness. Which in my opinion is why there are more stand up comedians in the Gobi Desert than there are in Liverpool.
Just think how happy you’d be if you were 20’ tall!
This is just theoretical at the moment of course and it won’t be passed law until I’ve got it published in a leading science journal, but next time you’re out riding in the same group as Marek and Keith, just keep half an eye on who’s the happiest for me will you?
On a related point, when it rains, tall people get wet sooner than short people. And what about large breasted women, surely they get wind-chill before anyone else when a cold front moves in? But that’s another story…