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  • This episode of DNews is brought to you by Harry’s.

  • Body shaving is a tradition in some sportsMaybe I should try it outyou knowfor sports.

  • Shaving in sports is a big deal, cyclists do it to reduce road rash, and cut drag; swimmers

  • do it to feel slicker in the water, and cut drag, and body builders do itwellto

  • look like this[a][b]. Wowza. WhewAnyway, you can see that speedy sports shave their

  • bodies to CUT DRAG. They're saying, cleaning off these follicles are going to help you

  • win a race! How do you feel about leg shaving for swimmers? Meh?! YeahThat's how I felt

  • about it. Kind of just like, okay, go ahead! As long as you feel better! But science says

  • I might have been playing down a SIGNIFICANT advantage without knowing it!

  • Drag reduction in speed sports is a huge deal. Cyclists have been doing it for over 100 years.

  • But it wasn't until 1987 that a study was conducted for Bicycling Magazine by an engineer

  • in a wind tunnel. This study determined the speed savings were 0.6 percent. Which is just

  • sad. That's SO small. Maybe enough to save five seconds over an hour at 23 mph (37kph).

  • The results were so piddling, and wind tunnels so expensive to use, no one ever repeated

  • the experimentuntil now.

  • A special bicycle-specific wind tunnel was built by the Specialized cycling company,

  • and the researchers had free use of it for testing! Coincidentally, one of their riders

  • had shaved that day, so they figured, why not? Don't cost nothing, and they found the

  • shaving had reduced the cyclists drag 7 percent!! SEVEN. This meant, a cyclist in a 25 mile

  • (40km), one hour race could save 79-seconds by simply shaving their bod! These findings

  • were revolutionary, so to double-check they tested five more cyclists. They all saved

  • 50-82 seconds over 40 km. WHAT?! They also tested different helmets, different positions

  • and long-sleeved racing gear finding significant power savings here and there. They were shocked.

  • Shaving works, at least in cycling.

  • In swimming, the jury is still in over its head. Common wisdom is shaving is mostly psychological.

  • HowStuffWorks says, "Razors strip dead skin cells off the body in addition to hair, exposing

  • a fresh layer of sensitive skin cells." Because of that, the swimmer FEELS better in the water.

  • Though a 1989 study, the only one I could find, tested the physiology of shaved and

  • unshaved swimmers while also testing their drag reduction. Turns out, physiologically,

  • there were no differences in heart rate, oxygen use, or lactic acid buildup (which is what

  • makes your muscles burn during exercise). There WERE, however, noticeable drag reductions.

  • Mentally, swimmers probably believe themselves to be slicker and more powerful in the water,

  • even without science, but we're here to back them up. Ladies and dudes, you're totally

  • slicker.

  • Some runners will also get into the habit of body shaving, expecting that over a long

  • race they might reduce drag, but more often the clothing worn will produce more drag than

  • the lack of hair could ever make up for. So instead, most Olympic runners today wear computer-designed,

  • NASA influenced running suits, designed to help them glide through the air. Or so they

  • say!

This episode of DNews is brought to you by Harry’s.

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