would it be against the rules to use someone in a vintage car to generate a partial vacuum in front of one?Hi,
I watched with interest as Sir Bradley beat the 1hour record, and woke up with a question!
What would the minimum requirements be for an e-bike to = his time?
Camerart.
a bit too new for vintage, more classic. Guy's gone faster,vintage
Yes, as long as the car was powered by the same battery pack, so I think you can answer it yourself.would it be against the rules to use someone in a vintage car to generate a partial vacuum in front of one?
http://www.core77.com/posts/25260/tom-donhous-experiments-in-speed-the-fastest-fixed-gear-ever-25260
No, as long as the car was powered by the same battery pack, so I think you can answer it yourself.
Got my YES mixed up with my NO
C.
That's quite amazing, if Sir Brad, produced 1.5Kw for an hour.You wouldn't need a crank drive because you'd only be going one speed. Bradley's bike didn't have gears. Any motor could do it whether geared or not. It makes no difference. You just need a motor that can sustain about 500w for an hour. It would need to spin up to about 460 rpm. 72v would be a convenient voltage to get that speed. Consumption would be about 750 watts, so two 11.6ah 36v batteries in series (835wh), should do it. You'd still need a sreamlined bike and riding gear. If you wanted to do it on a normal MTB, you'd need about 1500w from the battery and a big DD motor.
He wasn't riding a MTB!That's quite amazing, if Sir Brad, produced 1.5Kw for an hour.
C.
I don't know how to re-phrase the question?He wasn't riding a MTB!
Also, 1500w is from the battery, not output power.
Would you be peddling too on that contraption, or just sat on as a passenger.You wouldn't need a crank drive because you'd only be going one speed. Bradley's bike didn't have gears. Any motor could do it whether geared or not. It makes no difference. You just need a motor that can sustain about 500w for an hour. It would need to spin up to about 460 rpm. 72v would be a convenient voltage to get that speed. Consumption would be about 750 watts, so two 11.6ah 36v batteries in series (835wh), should do it. You'd still need a sreamlined bike and riding gear. If you wanted to do it on a normal MTB, you'd need about 1500w from the battery and a big DD motor.
No peddling, I was interested to see how much power Sir Brad used in an hour for that distance. In as similar e-bike as possible to Sir Brads.Would you be peddling too on that contraption, or just sat on as a passenger.
Thanks d8veh, also mfj197. That seems about right.If you used an electrified version of BW's bike and wore the same streamlines gear and rode it in the same velodrome, somewhere around 350w to 450w is my estimate.