A black-and-white photo of a person mid-air in a Superman-style body suspension pose, supported by multiple hooks in their back and legs, smiling joyfully toward the camera. They are suspended horizontally in a large indoor space with high ceilings and visible rigging. A group of onlookers—some seated, some standing—watch with expressions of admiration, amusement, and support. The atmosphere is lively and communal, capturing a moment of shared experience and transformation.

Then we spoke about mathematics..

Andy loves cycling and mathematics. So much so that he had this tattooed by Jase of Art ‘n’ Soul Tattoo in Devon, England, and by the looks of things he cycled home after the tattoo session. Now that’s dedication!

It’s the bicycle power formula, it describes the various forces against which I’ve battled for pretty much every week of the last quarter century!

Enjoy things bicycle related? Click here, here and here.

See more in Geek Tattoos (Tattoos)

Comments

24 responses to “Then we spoke about mathematics..”

  1. jazzybean Avatar

    oooh.. Penny Farthing in the background

  2. Anjellica Avatar
    Anjellica

    i like the bme+ezine=.com thing.

    other then that it’s an okay tattoo i guess, if you’re into that sort of thing. i personally dont like math and don’t find the appeal of having a mathematic formula tattooed onto me.

  3. Anjellica Avatar
    Anjellica

    Or on anyone for that matter.

  4. Jaimes Avatar
    Jaimes

    He has sexy legs.

  5. krys Avatar
    krys

    As a cyclist meself, I’m lovin’ this. I fancy getting a tattoo of that oily chain mark you get on the inside of your right calf on summer rides when not paying attention…

  6. almaxaquotal Avatar

    I think this is a really cool choice of tattoo!! And yeah… obviously he *is* into that sort of thing or he wouldn’t have gotten the tattoo and I think the appeal (to him) is obvious even from the minimal information supplied O_O

  7. JohnnyThief Avatar

    I’ve done a bunch of bike tattoos, they’re usually pretty dedicated people. Now if I can just find more time to get on my Specialized Hard Rock, & work on this tattoo guy physique, that would be good,…

  8. xander Avatar
    xander

    Oh now this just rocks! i want him!

  9. cuntcumber Avatar
  10. heather Avatar
    heather

    this is sick

  11. jack Avatar

    Crankset? Crankset? He’s on a Mercian, and you’re noticing the crankset? Tch! That’s a beautiful frame!

    Krys – the oily mark you refer to is usually known as a “chainring tattoo”. 😉

  12. Plush Avatar
    Plush

    FOR THE WIN, AG!!!!!!!!!

  13. Plush Avatar
    Plush

    ps. Also, Andy, you have the greatest legs – and i just pee’d myself when i saw this!

  14. Joe Avatar
    Joe

    I’m seeing what looks like a pennyfarthing wheel in the backround, awesome tattoo and bike he’s on but penny farthings’ eclipse everything elses cool factor

  15. Sarita Avatar

    Im currently studying very basic mechanics and Id quite like to get to understand this formula, I can follow some variables but others have me curious =]

  16. oniana Avatar

    http://iam.bmezine.com/?andygates

    (his page-which he needs to update!!!!)

    hi andy. i lurve you and your leg and your penny farthing

  17. Kleptomaniac Avatar

    I wish I loved math that much. Lol

  18. timebomb Avatar
    timebomb

    not to nitpick, but isn’t it more of a physics tattoo than a math one?

  19. jazzybean Avatar

    not really – physics and maths overlap a hell of a lot

  20. cuntcumber Avatar

    Jack – I was trying to figure out what frame he was on. Knew from the Reynolds sticker that it must be decent, but never thought to look behind his leg at the downtube.

    :/

  21. krys Avatar
    krys

    one “real” chainring tattoo for me then 🙂

  22. tinpe Avatar
    tinpe

    I’ts actually a physics formula, and yes physics and math overlap, but you would never learn this in a math class. It’s basic dynamics physics.

  23. andy Avatar
    andy

    Sarita – check out the Bicycle Performance page on Wikipedia for the details. Basically there are two chunks of resistance, the linear chunk, which is proportional to friction, gradient and groundspeed, and the non-linear chunk which brings in the square of windspeed. At some point around 17-19 mph, the non-linear part becomes the major force, which is why it’s easy to go slow and really hard to go really really fast.

    And yeah, that’s a pennyfarthing. He’s called Bucephalus. Hope to do a century ride on him this summer…

  24. GhostCatFromHades Avatar
    GhostCatFromHades

    I think I’m in lust.

    Gorgeous.

    Like the tat as well.

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