- May 14, 2010
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Re: Re:
Perhaps not.
But the reporter is so specific (price, length of backlog) that he is either lying outright, believing someone else's outright lies; or, onto something.
jyl said:Maxiton said:You can do more miracles with electricity than chemistry, it’s also less damaging to your health. -- Industry "guru" of moto-doping
The new frontier is far more technologically advanced and ten times as expensive. It’s in the rear wheel: it costs 200,000 Euros, and there’s a waiting list of six months. -- Gazzetta dello Sport
The above quotes are from the article cited earlier. The industry guru, whoever he is, seems pretty convinced. I imagine that if you don't care about your health, you can do even more miracles with the two in combination.
Meanwhile, notice that the Gazzetta dello Sport reporter isn't conjecturing about whether these electromagnetic wheels are possible; he's saying they're already in production, and that the backlog for them is six months. He's also saying that they have a price, two-hundred thousand euros each. That can only mean they are in production and being produced at a profit. And at that price they are not being bought for grand fondos.
These things are always impossible. Until they're not. From 2010 I recall reading some very good responses to the question of bottom bracket motors that drew upon seemingly solid knowledge of engineering and physics, and that said such motors were, if not impossible, impractical. Some of these arguments were so compelling that the debate was pretty much at a standstill - until little Femke Van den Driessche showed up, teary-eyed, with her motor bought with parakeet money.
I would suggest that Gazetta Dello Sport has printed quite a lot of fiction in its history. Italian sports media is not exactly Scientific American.
Perhaps not.