Granville57 said:Aw shucks.
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Awwww. I see what Lance saw in...which one of us was it?
Granville57 said:Aw shucks.
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Kicker661 said:You have it all wrong as you go to someone with brains and pay them $100k to fabricate a one off system for you.
Have you seen what the hobby guys create nowadays? The hardcore guys create insane custom cars/trucks/planes from their garages fitted out like machinists.
You don't need a Billion dollar company to come up with this stuff. The parts already exist. The diffs in rc cars hitting 150km/h+ are a little bigger than 1cm3. The diff in my 15kg rc truck is about 1.5cm3 and that survived a massive amount of abuse time after time WAY more than what would be required for a burst system i am referring to. You don't need metals from Mars or anything exotic, the current stuff will handle it.
Speaking to the British newspaper Telegraph, Boardman said that in theory teams could use cutting-edge technology from Formula 1 to boost the power of any battery-powered motorized system. Boardman suggested they could even tap into the battery that was already used by several teams to power the front and gear changers on bikes.
"And don't forget electrically operated gears are legal these days so there is already a power source on many bikes."
"It would be very little trouble adapting a power source to give you maybe a couple of hundred watts for 20 minutes or so, which would basically gives you 40 per cent more power through the pedals in a time trial say. You could reduce that power and spread it over a longer period of time or go for one 'hit'. Its potential is obvious. You could use it when you are trying to establish a break or on the crux of the last climb of the day or maybe in the latter stages of a long time trial."
Boardman admits it would be difficult to detect if a rider uses a motor-powered bike.
...
"With little buttons controlling the gears these days I suspect it would also be pretty simple to disguise," Boardman said.
"There is not a shred of doubt that the technology exists to cheat in this way and that a rider could get a definite return from such cheating.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/boardman-warned-the-uci-of-risks-of-bike-dopingUCI President Pat McQuaid has played down the possibility of riders using bikes fitted with hidden motors. "This is a story that has gone around the world like wildfire. Whereas there is no foundation for it," McQuaid told the Associated Press.
GoodTimes said:Would you like to provide us with a source for your information? It contradicts what I have read.
Are you interested in interacting with my analyis of these batteries, which corroborate my information?
http://www.batteryspace.com/high-pow...assed-3-0.aspx
http://www.vivax-assist.com/en/produ...ssist_4-0.html
Are you going to interact with the references to MIT presentations, or wikipedia?
GoodTimes said:Would you like to provide us with a source for your information? It contradicts what I have read.
Are you interested in interacting with my analyis of these batteries, which corroborate my information?
http://www.batteryspace.com/high-pow...assed-3-0.aspx
http://www.vivax-assist.com/en/produ...ssist_4-0.html
Are you going to interact with the references to MIT presentations, or wikipedia?
Catwhoorg said:Neither of those linked directly to a battery.
http://www.batteryspace.com/hi-powerli-popacks.aspx
Does show 170 Wh/Kg Li-Ion batteries though.
fishtacos said:Unless you have an external battery source, there's (probably) no way you're going to get a hub motor that's small enough to do any good without someone noticing that your hubs are strangely oversized on only some of your teams' wheels....
Race Radio said:http://bicitruccata.com/
There is also this one
https://vimeo.com/104632715
Yes, there is a lot of talk about this. Some of the talk comes from people I respect and trust, but personally I don't buy it yet
Michele said:Roberto Damiani wrote an interesting tweet 1 or 2 days after the affair.
MacRoadie said:I think you're looking at the problem from the wrong angle: in either the BB or hub scenario, for the system to work as efficiently as possible, the BB or hub axle actually becomes PART of the motor itself. The axle is the rotor, and the BB shell or hub body then becomes the stator. There would be no separate motor lodged somewhere in the frame.
Also, there's no need for any visible wiring either in the rear hub scenario: contacts built into the rear drop outs (one per side), which come into contact with the locknut at each end of the axle would provide current. Already pretty standard stuff for chargers on everything from vacuums to razors to cell phones.
All would require extensive modification to the frame, and obviously entail the involvement of the manufacturer, but mechanically doable.
ScienceIsCool said:Yup. I'm aware of your analysis (flawed assumptions of moment of inertia) and Rasmussen's useless demo (doesn't represent what happened - i.e., spin up the rear wheel and then drop/slide the bike onto the ground; it certainly won't spin the way Rasmussen's bike did...). My values for energy density come very directly from the link I sent. State of the art for a LiMnO2 (Manganese based Li-Ion) cell is roughly 100 Wh/kg. Lithium Cobaltite cells (same link) have roughly 200 Wh/kg energy density, but are useless for this type of application because they suffer from low ion mobility (i.e., high internal resistance) at high currents.
John Swanson
Catwhoorg said:Neither of those linked directly to a battery.
http://www.batteryspace.com/hi-powerli-popacks.aspx
Does show 170 Wh/Kg Li-Ion batteries though.
Gavandope said:Another physics geek here - nuke is really my thing though but you don't get to QM without going past MaxwellThis thread is a pretty entertaining read!
Gavandope said:we haven't got the battery technology powerful never mind small or light enough yet for them to be able to hide it properly - such as having the whole mechanism inside the frame when the carbon is cooked in the oven.
GoodTimes said:Welcome to the party...
RE this statement:
You sure? I think the conclusion of this thread is that a lithium ion battery would indeed be small and light enough to be hide-able in a bike frame (or other places, such as as a part of an electronic shifting system).
GoodTimes said:Welcome to the party...
RE this statement:
You sure? I think the conclusion of this thread is that a lithium ion battery would indeed be small and light enough to be hide-able in a bike frame (or other places, such as as a part of an electronic shifting system).
D-Queued said:Sorry, I am not drinking the koolaid and that is not the conclusion of this thread.
That is the position being put forward by a minority. Said arguments including citations of Wikipedia as proof.
There does appear to be an increasing number of others with direct experience in electrochemistry and electrochemical devices that are not buying into the concept that batteries will soon be powering rocket lift-off.
Dave.
Granville57 said:OK. Without a link or possible translation, that doesn't give us much to work with. Does it?
D-Queued said:Sorry, I am not drinking the koolaid and that is not the conclusion of this thread.
That is the position being put forward by a minority. Said arguments including citations of Wikipedia as proof.
There does appear to be an increasing number of others with direct experience in electrochemistry and electrochemical devices that are not buying into the concept that batteries will soon be powering rocket lift-off.
Dave.
D-Queued said:Sorry, I am not drinking the koolaid and that is not the conclusion of this thread.
That is the position being put forward by a minority. Said arguments including citations of Wikipedia as proof.
There does appear to be an increasing number of others with direct experience in electrochemistry and electrochemical devices that are not buying into the concept that batteries will soon be powering rocket lift-off.
Dave.
Race Radio said:...This is the motor that is perhaps the most advanced, smallest. The one that Cancellara and Lance are "Connected" to.
http://bicitruccata.com/
...
GoodTimes said:Hello Dave,
A straw man is a common type of fallacy based on the misrepresentation of an opponent's argument.
Please review the actual requirements that I have stated as being relevant to the issue at hand. I think you'll find that they are far lower than rocket takeoff.
Please review the actual references that have been provided, by myself and others. I think you'll find many sources that go beyond wikipedia.
Please review the actual opinion of the people who have commented on the topic. Add up the actual yeas and nays. Where do you see a minority?
Earlier I made the summarizing statement:
"Cheers. I think we all broadly agree then that a realistic range of specific energy is somewhere between 100 and 250 Wh/kg. I'm inclined to believe the higher numbers myself, but think even the low end of this scale is technically practicable for a motor solution."
What aspect of this statement do you contest? Do you contest the specific energy, as stated here. Or do you contest the energy requirements of a motored solution? Or do you take issue with some other, as yet, undefined issue? In any case, I look forward to your reasoned response, and evaluating the references [be it quotes in this thread, or external sources] that you are able to provide.
As of now, we have your bare assertions, and are left to wonder what they are based upon.
regards