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• #2
Brilliant thanks for posting. Unbelievable that no one else in the production of this system has spotted that it is not new technology. Write in and tell them.
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• #3
Ha, and they want a patent on it... I'll just fetch that SA hub out of the shed...
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• #4
isn't it the phase shifting that makes it differ from a standard planetary gear though, hence the desire to file a patent?
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• #5
isn't it the phase shifting that makes it differ from a standard planetary gear though, hence the desire to file a patent?
I only go to an engineering school, I dont *actually *know how anything works.
Still a bit odd not to cite either james watt or sturmey archer and speak about the whole thing like its a COMPLETELEY new revolutionary technology. IT seems like a very tiny modification of the old Sturmey at the most.
Spotted this article in an engineering magazine:
http://i26.tinypic.com/5yytlh.jpg
The concept of a compact planetary gearing system seems awfully familiar!
With the planetary Epicyclic gear system being taken from James Watts 1781 patent.
Just goes to show, technology goes around/comes around. If it works it works - making it lightweight/fragile/expensive/fiddly is not an "improvement". Its just different. And in the case of our trusty fixed wheels, this rings most true.