Marc S.
100 W
Chalo said:I'm guessing you live somewhere pretty flat.
Why?
Chalo said:I'm guessing you live somewhere pretty flat.
Chalo said:Because a heavy velomobile is only more efficient than a normal bike when it does not have to work against gravity.
Marc S. said:Chalo said:Because a heavy velomobile is only more efficient than a normal bike when it does not have to work against gravity.
Current velomobiles weight around 30kg, the latest and fastest models a tad above 20kg. Thats not really heavy.
Chalo said:It is true that most of the handicap a velomobile has is in disabling its rider from making the most of its pedals--
Chalo said:It is true that most of the handicap a velomobile has is in disabling its rider from making the most of its pedals-- a disadvantage that electric drive does not share. But there is no doubt that a big wide heavy vehicle with three wheels that are free to disagree with each other will be slower both climbing and maneuvering. The aero shell only works for one kind of resistance.
Anyone who has pushed a car on flat ground understands this intuitively. I build pedicab trikes-- the best, fastest pedicab trikes I am aware of-- but they are still trikes, and heavy, thus slow. All the aero improvements in the world would not change that. They would only make the trike heavier and harder to live with.
Chalo said:Marc S. said:Chalo said:Because a heavy velomobile is only more efficient than a normal bike when it does not have to work against gravity.
Current velomobiles weight around 30kg, the latest and fastest models a tad above 20kg. Thats not really heavy.
Apples to apples, please. Bikes made with comparable materials and techniques (and to a comparable cost) weigh in the 5kg range.
Chalo said:It is true that most of the handicap a velomobile has is in disabling its rider from making the most of its pedals-
quite a misleading statement "if" you consider the power required to accelerate masses, not only in translation but in rotation tooChalo said:Because a heavy velomobile is only more efficient than a normal bike when it does not have to work against gravity.
"ceteris paribus" just because the latin expression sounds funnierLockH said:I assumed watt was meant was "all else equal".
veloman said:That's pretty old school - Aerospoke. I would consider a rear disc as wheel. With the weight of an ebike, crosswinds shouldn't be an issue. Corbin Fiber (keegan?) has front and rear disc covers.
John in CR said:Get some of that yellow on the rim and motor...maybe red for the spokes, or most of them black and 5 near parallel pairs in yellow. I don't know, but the bike looks so great, and the checker batt box works, so you gotta do something about the motor wheel.
I am in the process of testing my crude home made version of it and initial tests show 5% speed increase and 30% more battery range. I did this with coroplast and duct tape.