A friend sent me a link to this picture as a comment on something I'd said a while back. If you look closely, you'll see that the carbon fibre front wheel disintegrated and the tire stuffed itself between the front fender and the forks and what was left of the wheel. I have no idea where this happened and under what conditions, but it's a pretty interesting look at what pushing the edges of available technology can produce.All Rights Reserved © "Never argue with a fool; onlookers may not be able to tell the difference."
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Sep 8, 2009
Chasing New Technology
A friend sent me a link to this picture as a comment on something I'd said a while back. If you look closely, you'll see that the carbon fibre front wheel disintegrated and the tire stuffed itself between the front fender and the forks and what was left of the wheel. I have no idea where this happened and under what conditions, but it's a pretty interesting look at what pushing the edges of available technology can produce.1 comment:
Disagree? Bring it on. Have more to add? Feel free to set me straight. Unfortunately, Blogger doesn't do a great job of figuring out which Anonymous commenters are actually real people, not Russians or Chinese bots. Because of that, I don't accept anonymous posts. If you have something worth saying, you shouldn't be afraid of using your ID.
That wheel looks as though its left flange came off. If the tire had been stuffed by rotation, it would have to be turning backward! The flange is definitely a weak point, but I remember one of the first wheels for Honda single-sided swingarm being bent in a practice at Brainerd WSB. At the time I retired it, my rear WM-5 Hannetrack-Monobrink cast mag wheel was full of cracks. Current Marchesini forged road racing wheels are as thin as 1.5-mm in places, according to their manufacturer. One thing driving wheel evolution is the rapid development of higher-strength magnesium alloys by the auto industry, which has to make things like seat frames out of the stuff. In the bad old days there was AZ31B. Mag wheels were preferred in MX at one time because the available alloys bent rathr than broke on impact - kinda nice.
ReplyDeleteNothing happens any more in US general aviation because all existing designs are fully "sued-out" and nobody wants to restart that cycle by offering a new product with unknown failure modes. That's the good aspect of well-understood technology.
The other side of that coin is piston engines vs turbines. At the end, a brand-new factory-fresh P&W R-2800 would go 3000-3500 hours before overhaul, and a Bristol Hercules maybe 4000. Rebuilds maybe 2500-hours. But today turbines normally are on the wing 25,000 hours and they are talking about pushing this to 50,000 - essentiall same as airframe life. Car engines are giving 5000-hours and sometimes more, helped by their very gentle duty cycle that spends most of its life under 10% power.
I wonder what to do with all my cameras that use film, including an old Speed Graphic and a late-1930s Contax. Film? What is FILM?
KC