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• #777
Sure, it's not as good as a cheap, reliable energy supply from a national grid but it might be an option for those off-grid... like rural rice farmers and testers during northern european winters ;-)
Others doubt the appeal of off-grid solutions. “The poor...want grid-based power like urban households that can run TV sets at the flick of a switch,” says Lydia Powell, senior fellow and energy expert at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation.
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• #778
It probably could use bluetooth, zwift and power metering.
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• #779
He would have better put that sort of money into nuclear fusion research.
He's only planning to spend $1M
he plans to distribute 10,000 of his Free Electric battery-equipped bikes
It’s so simple that we think we can make it for $100For that money, you can't do anything useful, apart from maybe just hand out the cash to poor people
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• #780
it might be an option for those off-grid... like rural rice farmers
If you have enough sunshine to grow rice, you have enough to generate your 250Wh per day with Solar PV for well under the $100 target price of his bicycle, and you don't have to waste a couple of hours when you could otherwise be working to get it.
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• #781
Yes but... but what would our rice growing, rural, off-grid timetrialist then do with his evenings?
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• #782
You clearly haven't thought this through ;-)
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• #783
Yeah, but won't someone think of sexeh calf muscles.
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• #785
Dot Com's Concept
3 Attachments
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• #786
OMG THE FUTURE HAS ARRIVED etc
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• #787
Design for a Cracking good time...
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• #788
But THE DISC BRAKES WILL BE DIRECTLY ATTACHED TO THE SPOKES OF THE WHEEL
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• #789
Also loving the way the saddle is directly above the cranks. Yes.
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• #790
Cheating ebike using tt people.
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• #791
An interesting approach to solving the seat tube problem. :)
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• #792
THE DISC BRAKES which transmit torque to the rim WILL BE DIRECTLY ATTACHED TO THE radial SPOKES OF THE WHEEL
Nothing could possibly go wrong there.
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• #793
They should just attach them directly to the rim, would look mean as well.
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• #794
They should just attach them directly to the rim
Why not get even more radical and make the brake rotor and the wheel rim one part?
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• #795
Nonsense, how would that even work? You'd hit the wheel every time you try to brake.
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• #796
As if that will ever catch on
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• #798
Canyon looks rad. The designer is a stylist, not an engineer; there's no more point in berating the mechanics of the thing than there is berating the innards of your freehub for not being beautiful enough.
Companies employ stylists to make things look good.
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• #799
Just came across this Scott Robertson vid, explaining how to design around given hard points. He uses bicycles to explain his experiences so plenty of neat bicycle sketches appear throughout the vid.
Mostly Kestrel bicycles and concept art for movies, so probably not everyone's cuppa.
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• #800
Mostly Kestrel bicycles and concept art for movies, so probably not everyone's cuppa.
I get that he isn't trying to reinvent the bicycle frame, but it still strikes me as ironic he chose that as an example given how pretty much unchanged the modern diamond bicycle frame (geometry) has been for so many years. I wonder if it will ever change.
Always nice to see somebody paying attention. Yes, you're right, so you only need to buy 400g of dry rice costing 8p (when bought by the Quintal of crappy Government Quality) to get the 124kJ net (generator output less cooking input, assuming you use best practice for cooking), which is about 0.7p worth of electricity at UK domestic prices.
Basically, food is very expensive in terms of energy content compared with oil or gas, and as much as we love the efficiency of a man on bicycle, he turns out to be pretty crap as an electricity generator compared with a good combined cycle gas power station which can exceed 50%