โMar-29-2014 09:18 AM
โMar-29-2014 10:30 PM
โMar-29-2014 08:51 PM
โMar-29-2014 08:22 PM
smkettner wrote:
Percent means parts of 100. 31% is 31 foot rise over 100 foot forward distance.
โMar-29-2014 08:02 PM
ReneeG wrote:
Usually the percentage of incline is relative to the terrain and not that bad.
โMar-29-2014 07:56 PM
I think the OP was just trying to make the point it was a freakin' steep hill and beware. Then it turned into math class.:B
โMar-29-2014 07:23 PM
โMar-29-2014 06:00 PM
dave54 wrote:pappcam wrote:Fishinghat wrote:
The grade in degrees is normally a percentage of a 45 degree angle. So, 31% would be about 16 degrees. That's still a very steep hill, but "doable". A 31 degree hill would be about double in slope and I'm not sure a typical wheeled vehicle could navigate it.
On the other hand, I've never been there and it could be much different than what I think the sign implies.
I'm thinking the sign maker confused degrees with percentage.
Percentage slopes actually are a percentage of 45 degrees so that is about a 16-17 degree slope. The sign does display percent and not degrees so the sign maker is correct.
?????
Percent slope is feet rise for a 100 foot horizontal distance. (or meters, or yards, et al, as long as the unit of measure is the same for both).
A 45 degree angle is a 100% slope. 31% is a 17.22 degrees.
To convert % slope to angle use the inverse tangent function on any calculator with trig functions.
โMar-29-2014 05:33 PM
pappcam wrote:Fishinghat wrote:
The grade in degrees is normally a percentage of a 45 degree angle. So, 31% would be about 16 degrees. That's still a very steep hill, but "doable". A 31 degree hill would be about double in slope and I'm not sure a typical wheeled vehicle could navigate it.
On the other hand, I've never been there and it could be much different than what I think the sign implies.
I'm thinking the sign maker confused degrees with percentage.
Percentage slopes actually are a percentage of 45 degrees so that is about a 16-17 degree slope. The sign does display percent and not degrees so the sign maker is correct.
โMar-29-2014 05:24 PM
โMar-29-2014 04:59 PM
Fishinghat wrote:
The grade in degrees is normally a percentage of a 45 degree angle. So, 31% would be about 16 degrees. That's still a very steep hill, but "doable". A 31 degree hill would be about double in slope and I'm not sure a typical wheeled vehicle could navigate it.
On the other hand, I've never been there and it could be much different than what I think the sign implies.
I'm thinking the sign maker confused degrees with percentage.
โMar-29-2014 04:47 PM
BTPO1 wrote:pnichols wrote:
I wonder how steep Old Priest Grade is in CA?
We went up that once in our 3-speed column shift Dodge 3/4 ton camper van and it barely could pull it in first gear, as only 3-speed manual shift gearing results in a tall first gear - plus we had over-diameter sized tires on it which made all of it's gear ratios even taller. (We got 18 MPG out of it's 318 V8 on camping trips, however ... this was using 1972 V8 engine technology.)
I found an article on Old Priest Grade and it mentions that it is a 22 degree slope. BTW last time we were there RVs' were prohibited from using it, had to use CA120, which was full of switchbacks and very slow but beautiful.
โMar-29-2014 01:44 PM
pnichols wrote:
I wonder how steep Old Priest Grade is in CA?
We went up that once in our 3-speed column shift Dodge 3/4 ton camper van and it barely could pull it in first gear, as only 3-speed manual shift gearing results in a tall first gear - plus we had over-diameter sized tires on it which made all of it's gear ratios even taller. (We got 18 MPG out of it's 318 V8 on camping trips, however ... this was using 1972 V8 engine technology.)
โMar-29-2014 01:03 PM
โMar-29-2014 12:54 PM
โMar-29-2014 12:47 PM