Convert Cycling Speed (cycle) to Centimeter/Second (cm/s) instantly.
Cycling Speed to Centimeter/Second conversion
1 Cycling Speed (cycle) = 690 Centimeter/Second (cm/s). To convert Cycling Speed to Centimeter/Second, multiply the value by 690.
| Cycling Speed (cycle) | Centimeter/Second (cm/s) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 690 |
| 2 | 1380 |
| 5 | 3450 |
| 10 | 6900 |
| 25 | 17250 |
| 50 | 34500 |
| 100 | 69000 |
| 1000 | 690000 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Centimeter/Second are in one Cycling Speed?
One Cycling Speed (cycle) equals 690 Centimeter/Second (cm/s).
How do I convert Cycling Speed to Centimeter/Second?
To convert Cycling Speed to Centimeter/Second, multiply the value by 690.
What is 10 Cycling Speed in Centimeter/Second?
10 Cycling Speed = 6900 Centimeter/Second.
About these units
Cycling Speed (cycle)
Typical cycling speeds vary dramatically by context: Casual cycling (4–7 m/s or 15–25 km/h), Road cyclists (8–12 m/s or 30–45 km/h), Professional racing (12–15 m/s or 45–54 km/h), Sprint track cyclists (peaks of 20 m/s or 72 km/h or more). Cycling is highly efficient due to mechanical advantage and reduced ground friction. Aerodynamics becomes a dominant factor at higher speeds, shaping bicycle frame design, wheel geometry, and rider posture. Cycling speeds inform urban infrastructure (bike lanes, safety regulations), sports training, and commuter planning. As a hybrid of human physiology and mechanical engineering, cycling speed provides insight into how technology amplifies natural human motion.
Centimeter/Second (cm/s)
A centimeter per second is widely used in hydrology, biology, and physics to measure modest fluid flows, blood velocities, small organism movement, or lab-scale chemical transport. In medicine, cm/s is important in Doppler ultrasound, where blood flow speeds in arteries and veins are routinely measured. In physical sciences, cm/s appears in low-speed fluid mechanics experiments, sediment transport studies, and oceanographic microcurrent analysis. It offers a convenient, human-comprehensible scale for small but dynamic systems.