The OP
Is it possible to pull off a 30 meters high air in a quarter pipe?
Ever since 1996, when Ingmar Backman did his legendary backside air up in Riksgränsen, I’ve been wondering: how big can a human actually go in a quarter — purely in theory?
Today, approximately 29 years later, I finally chat:ed my way to the answer (feel free to double-check the math and send feedback).
With the right height and transition on the quarterpipe, and a carefully calculated speed that a pair of well-trained thighs can withstand. I’ve come up with this:
I crunched the numbers using the laws of physics and assumed the rider can handle 4 g in the transition. Here are the formulas and calculations:
1. Total g-force in a quarterpipe:
g_total = (v² / (r × g)) + 1
Where:
• `v` = speed in m/s
• `r` = radius of the quarterpipe (in meters)
• `g` = 9.82 m/s² (gravitational acceleration)
2. Maximum speed without exceeding 4 g:
v² = (4 − 1) × r × g = 3 × r × g
3. Converting speed to height (all kinetic energy → height):
h = v² / (2g)
Insert v² from above:
h = (3 × r × g) / (2g) = (3/2) × r = 1.5 × r
So the maximum height above the lip becomes:
h = 1.5 × r
4. Example with a 20-meter radius quarterpipe:
h = 1.5 × 20 = 30 meters (above the lip)
Total height from ground = 20 + 30 = 50 meters
5. Speed required:
v² = 3 × 20 × 9.82 = 589.2
v = √589.2 ≈ 24.26 m/s ≈ 87.4 km/h
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Conclusion:
If you have a quarterpipe with a 20-meter radius and can handle 4 g in the transition — then, theoretically, you can pull off a 30-meter-high air.
So... what are you all waiting for out there?