luvinlife offthegrid
Lovin' The Homestead
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2011
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The "Lance Armstrong on crack" analogy is a good one.
The youth group I work with went to a presentation with an "energy bike" from Cornell University. It's really neat. It has the bike hooked up to a circuit board with a few different electrical items on a display board.
A 5th grader was told to hop on the bike and pedal normal speed. Then the presenter flipped stuff on. First, she flipped on a fan. Hardly any different. She shut that off, then flipped on a CFL bulb. It was a little harder to pedal. She turned two more on, and it got more difficult to pedal.
Then she turned all the CFL's off and flipped on an indandescent bulb. It was at the "more difficult to pedal" range. It was interesting to hear the bike suddenly slow and watch the person have to visibly pedal harder. The she flipped on another incadescent and the kid had to pedal standing up, and was obviously struggling. Then she turned on a hairdryer and the bike came to a screeching halt. It was a great hands-on lesson for the youth and adults that attended.
The youth group I work with went to a presentation with an "energy bike" from Cornell University. It's really neat. It has the bike hooked up to a circuit board with a few different electrical items on a display board.
A 5th grader was told to hop on the bike and pedal normal speed. Then the presenter flipped stuff on. First, she flipped on a fan. Hardly any different. She shut that off, then flipped on a CFL bulb. It was a little harder to pedal. She turned two more on, and it got more difficult to pedal.
Then she turned all the CFL's off and flipped on an indandescent bulb. It was at the "more difficult to pedal" range. It was interesting to hear the bike suddenly slow and watch the person have to visibly pedal harder. The she flipped on another incadescent and the kid had to pedal standing up, and was obviously struggling. Then she turned on a hairdryer and the bike came to a screeching halt. It was a great hands-on lesson for the youth and adults that attended.