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7000 from bottom of valley ttt.. totally doable!!
looks like atleast 3 good lines up that! whats the bottom look like!
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7000 from bottom of valley ttt.. totally doable!!
terrain trap = probable death!
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7000 from bottom of valley ttt.. totally doable!!
Its not even ride able,why post something you can't even do anyway's...
not ride able? i guesse u cant tell better from looking at a picture then i can seeing it in person....
So turbo hill is 1050 feet vertical from the starting point to summit. Actual distance covered in the climb of turbo is 2700 feet. Averaging a 67° climb.
I would be interested in the location of this mountain.
My guess is between Golden and field in the Yoho National Park. Some of the mountains in there are 9000 to 10000 feet and the valley bottom is around 3000 to 4000 feet.
Your math does not add up, Turbo cannot be more than 45 degrees, since at 45 degrees, you are travelling at a 1:1 horizontal/vertical ratio. That means that if Turbo is 1050 ft high and had an average slope of 45 degrees, you would travel 1050 ft to get to the top. If it was 67 degrees, you should actually travel less distance than 1050 ft to get to the top, not more. Average slope of Turbo has to be like 35 degrees in order to travel more horizontal distance than vertical distance. The sine of an angle is the ratio of the length of the opposite side (total vertical of 1050 ft) to the length of the hypotenuse (2700 ft). In our case Sin @ = opp/hyp = O/H. Sorry, don't have a sin function on my calc here to do the proper math but guessing by the horizontal vs vertical distance travelled that the average angle of Turbo is about 30-40 degrees, can't be over 45 though.
Sorry, Geometry's a hobby .
Highest mountains around there are in the 2700-2800 mtr range (according to google), the highest point on the rogers pass highway is 1300 mtrs, total vertical gain of 1400 meters or 4500 ft to the mountain top. I guess total distance travelled could be 7000 ft by the time you're done, but I'm not overly concerned with total distance, just vertical.
Your math does not add up, Turbo cannot be more than 45 degrees, since at 45 degrees, you are travelling at a 1:1 horizontal/vertical ratio. That means that if Turbo is 1050 ft high and had an average slope of 45 degrees, you would travel 1050 ft to get to the top. If it was 67 degrees, you should actually travel less distance than 1050 ft to get to the top, not more. Average slope of Turbo has to be like 35 degrees in order to travel more horizontal distance than vertical distance. The sine of an angle is the ratio of the length of the opposite side (total vertical of 1050 ft) to the length of the hypotenuse (2700 ft). In our case Sin @ = opp/hyp = O/H. Sorry, don't have a sin function on my calc here to do the proper math but guessing by the horizontal vs vertical distance travelled that the average angle of Turbo is about 30-40 degrees, can't be over 45 though.
Sorry, Geometry's a hobby .
Highest mountains around there are in the 2700-2800 mtr range (according to google), the highest point on the rogers pass highway is 1300 mtrs, total vertical gain of 1400 meters or 4500 ft to the mountain top. I guess total distance travelled could be 7000 ft by the time you're done, but I'm not overly concerned with total distance, just vertical.