scootz
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posted on 18/6/10 at 06:30 AM |
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Reverse Trike... Rear Wheel!
Can any of the reverse-trike intellectuals give an opinion on rear-tyre sizes?
A super-fat rear (300+) would indeed look cool, but what would the effect be on the machine, say in contrast to a more normal 190 size?
Ta!
It's Evolution Baby!
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r1_pete
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posted on 18/6/10 at 06:49 AM |
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Is it going to lean? a fat tyre will resist leaning.
Also depends on the weight over that wheel, less weight thinner tyre otherwise the contact pressure will reduce, ok in the dry because you have a
greater surface area in cotacct with the road, but would be bad in the wet.
Is the rear wheel going to be driven?
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scootz
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posted on 18/6/10 at 06:56 AM |
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Assuming a driven rear-wheel and minimal leaning (traditional wishbones at the front and vertical rear swing-arm travel)
It's Evolution Baby!
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smart51
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posted on 18/6/10 at 07:01 AM |
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Take the lowest tyre pressure that the side walls will cope with and divide by the weight on your rear wheel. This will give you the biggest size of
your contact patch. Divide that by the width of your tyre and that will give you the length of your contact parch. Now think about aquaplaning where
the front few centimetres of tyre are lifted off the ground by water. Do you have any grip left? That's not to mention traction on such a thin
contact patch.
The other thing you need to consider is the balance of grip between front and rear. Do you want permanent understeer? I would suggest a wider tyre
at the rear than the two fronts but not too wide.
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MakeEverything
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posted on 18/6/10 at 07:33 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by smart51
Take the lowest tyre pressure that the side walls will cope with and divide by the weight on your rear wheel. This will give you the biggest size of
your contact patch. Divide that by the width of your tyre and that will give you the length of your contact parch. Now think about aquaplaning where
the front few centimetres of tyre are lifted off the ground by water. Do you have any grip left? That's not to mention traction on such a thin
contact patch.
The other thing you need to consider is the balance of grip between front and rear. Do you want permanent understeer? I would suggest a wider tyre
at the rear than the two fronts but not too wide.
You wont get permanent understeer on a reverse trike.
I drove a grinnall scorpion once which had a huge rear tyre, and when i floored it, it broke lookse every time. That was with a BMW 1100 engine.
Kindest Regards,
Richard.
...You can make it foolProof, but youll never make it Idiot Proof!...
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iank
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posted on 18/6/10 at 07:48 AM |
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Can be made to work (you need a car tyre not a bike tyre unless you are leaning).
Given the conditions the t-rex can get it down the power down pretty well through its big rear tyre.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpkVzH1ltw0
--
Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level, then beat you with experience.
Anonymous
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scootz
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posted on 18/6/10 at 07:49 AM |
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Cheers guys... not so much concerned about wet-weather performance TBH.
It's Evolution Baby!
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v8kid
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posted on 18/6/10 at 08:34 AM |
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Go wide its cool on a trike.
All the roll resistance is taken by the front tyres so go wide there too.
Crucial to keep the c of g low, or more correctly the overturning moment low so a wide front track would not only look good but would be
functional.
Bikes tend to have a high c of g so just grafting a bike back end on to a locost front may not get the best results.
Tempting project but when would you use it?
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tony-devon
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posted on 18/6/10 at 09:57 AM |
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a nice big fat 17 or 18" car wheel with low profile tyre
at least running car tyres its far cheaper than a bike one!
heavy is good, heavy is reliable, and if it breaks, hit them with it
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hexxi
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posted on 18/6/10 at 11:23 AM |
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I`m also building a trike with one rear wheel. There`s a chain drive from a motorbike engine and the rear swing-arm is single sided. Then I can use a
car wheel in the rear also.
There are some problems if I want to have a wide rear wheel. The first is, the engine has to be installed off center if the rear wheel is considerably
wider than in the motorcycle the engine is from. The chain would otherwise collide with the tire on the left side. Moving the engine off the center
affects the weight distribution negatively.
In front I would like to have reasonably small and narrow wheels, not least because the vehicle is lightweight, so have the wheels have to be also
lightweight. Ideally the front wheels and the rear wheel should look the same, except the rear wheel being wider. For front I have been considering
195/50R15 or 195/45R16 with either 6,5 or 7 wide wheel. There`s wide range of nice looking wheels available in these sizes and also the tires are
inexpensive.
In the 15 or 16 there arent much more wider wheels than 7. If you want wider, you have go to larger diameter also.
18x8 for example is quite common size, it would allow to mount max 245/40 tyre. I have found a coupe nice wheel types which have sizes from 6,5x15
to 18x8. So it would be some sort of compromise.
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