audipiglet
10 mW
Hey everyone, I've been racking my brains but I can't figure out a good solution to my problem, I've made a wooden soapbox which has 20" bmx wheels which I used in the local soapbox derby, We had two runs down the course which had a slalom then a ramp, Last year's ramp was 4" tall which was fine, this year it was 18" tall! So it had a slalom to go around it with a 5 second time penalty, I opted out of the jump on my first run and got a time of 23 seconds which was the fastest run but with the time penalty I sat in 3rd place, so on my second run I had to go over the jump if I wanted first place, I hit the ramp at 20mph, flew 6 foot which missed the down ramp the other side and hit the road so hard I snapped the left rear axle clean through and bent the from left axle 45°, scraping down the road I lent out of the kart as far as I could to counter balance it and rolled the last 15m over the finish line with 2 1/2 wheels and with a time of 23 seconds and 1st place! After I stopped the front wheel pinged off in a hilarious cartoon fashion and the crowd were going nuts, it was the best, most terrifying 23 seconds I've had for a while.
So my problem is I need to beef up the wheels and axles somehow, they are 3/8" axles which I know is very small and I want to go to about 20mm but unsure how and the bmx wheels are not designed to take a side load so would bigger spokes help with this? Or is there a easier way I should be thinking? I guess folks here have had wheel problems when building electric recumbent bikes and trikes that need to take a lot of strain, this whole project is made of odd bits of wood and metal I've had lying around my workshop so the budget isn't very big, the whole thing has cost £40 so far including a tin of varnish so looking for a low cost solution, thank you for any help!



If anymore pictures would help I can take some more
So my problem is I need to beef up the wheels and axles somehow, they are 3/8" axles which I know is very small and I want to go to about 20mm but unsure how and the bmx wheels are not designed to take a side load so would bigger spokes help with this? Or is there a easier way I should be thinking? I guess folks here have had wheel problems when building electric recumbent bikes and trikes that need to take a lot of strain, this whole project is made of odd bits of wood and metal I've had lying around my workshop so the budget isn't very big, the whole thing has cost £40 so far including a tin of varnish so looking for a low cost solution, thank you for any help!



If anymore pictures would help I can take some more