H. Fred Kveck <(E-Mail Removed)> Mon, 31 Jan 2011 23:56:04
> Sorry, I missed your earlier response, Julian. So here's the answer:
>I'd seen the
>video a day or so prior and thought that the main guy in it and his
>concept were
>rather eccentric, and that the video was kind of funny. Your
>description of Cedric
>Lynch as a "classic English eccentric" and the fact that the discussion
>was about
>electric things reminded me of the video. So it was a vaguely related
>non sequitur,
>pretty much. Yeah, I know, kind of obscure. Sorry for the confusion.
"Eccentric" is being kind. Cedric is right out on the edge of the Bell
Curve and by a normal standard, he's completely barking! But he's also
an exceptional electrical engineer which is why most of the early
entrants to the Electric championships used his motors.
> As far as changing riding positions, yeah, that is going to be a
>hard one to get
>happening. The present position is very visible and the tradition of it
>is going to
>be hard to work around. I'd say that putting the engine of a car in the
>back was
>probably a *lot* easier to have be "acceptable" because it wasn't as
>visibly obvious
>as a change in position on a motorcycle (or bicycle, for that matter).
>And, as I
>recall, there had been cars with engines in the rear during the
>earliest times of the
>car, prior to a fixed layout becoming traditional.
Motorcyclists are a very tribal and hide bound bunch. We don't like
things that are too different and there's few real engineers and an
awful lot of experienced mechanics among us. Even something eminently
sensible like the big scooters get treated with scorn. So it's a good
thing that there's a few people out there like Cedric, Craig Vetter,
Royce Creasey and others who simply don't care what anyone thinks. Craig
especially is pushing boundaries and his goal of 100 mpg at 70 mph, into
a 30 mph headwind, with four bags of groceries is worth following. His
current ride is a truly horrible Honda Helix made interesting by some
fairly ugly streamlining. Just like Cedric's weird machine, you have to
look beyond the ugliness and hack build to see the beautiful, practical
commercialise machine waiting to be born.
Meanwhile, back in racing. The Electric championships are a moment in
time where we could perhaps release racing from the artificial
restrictions on design imposed in the 50s. But with each year and with
nobody trying it, the regs are being brought back in line with GP regs.
The latest is the weight limits (max 250Kg) that are causing Chip Yates
problems. It won't surprise me in the slightest if a couple of years
down the line the concessions about bodywork and riding position are
also brought back in line.
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