Neville’s contribution of rigging an electronic cyclometer and a marked rim, to count revolutions, is a significant one, happening as it did at a time when Jones Counter availability was uncertain. I believe his experiments with pressure monitoring and now with 25 meter calibration courses are interesting, but do not have as wide an application. He has said:
I have shown that there is no significant difference in accuracy between doing calibration on a 25-m rather than on a 300-m course when using rim readings in spoke intervals.
This statement has not been proven universally true. While it may be true that Neville has personally achieved comparable accuracy, it is a long way from this to a universal application. He has described an experiment done by one person and concluded that its results are universally true. Applause at this point is premature.
Pressure calibration is in its infancy. At present only Neville has data which supports his own measurements. I believe his results to be accurate – for him. Whether others will find similar results is unknown, as we have heard of nobody who has tried.
All of Neville’s methodologies require greater care by the measurer than do presently-accepted methods. The biggest impediment to general acceptance of these experimental methods is one of understanding by a reviewer – the certifier who must look at the paperwork and make sense out of it.
I have reviewed the measurements of one person who used the calibrated cyclometer and marked wheel, and it was not pleasant. Mistakes were made, and corrected. The review process took longer, as the measurer did not quite understand the process. Ultimately I certified the course.
What if someone should send me a measurement using calibrated cyclometer, marked wheel, pressure-adjusted calibration and a 25 meter calibration course? Would I then have to ask for all the supplementary information that would demonstrate that his work is OK? Neville has done this, for his own data only. It would be a nightmare to review.
Since Neville is a final signatory, this is not a problem, as nobody reviews his measurement data. He understands what he has done, and sees it to be correct.
I wonder what a measurement package sent to a certifier would look like if they used all of the new procedures seemingly proposed by Neville? Has he actually proposed them for general use, or has he simply put them out there as interesting experiments?
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