I saw this concept all wheel drive Motorcycle and was wondering if anyone has done this for a bicycle? if it can even be done. I know it wouldnt really be practical or serve a purpose but I think it would be cool
gowjobs said:... There was a cable-driven attempt at a 2wd MTB is the '80s or '90s, IIRC.
skillsthebarber said:I saw this concept all wheel drive Motorcycle and was wondering if anyone has done this for a bicycle? if it can even be done. I know it wouldnt really be practical or serve a purpose but I think it would be cool.
Yes that would work. I had originally just ran a long chain from the rear wheel up around the top sprocket and down under the crank sprocket and back to the rear wheel. It clears the frame. If I can find the chain I'll put it back on and take more pictures.skillsthebarber said:that is one cool machine. It got me wondering, could you run a double sprocket like this with the inside sprocket running a chain to the rear and the outside sprocket running a chain to the top/front
gowjobs said:My guess it drives the front wheel though a CV joint (the sprocket is hooked to a small drive axle, not the wheel itself) and utilizes in-hub steering of some sort. The main drawback I can see is that the chain would have to be positioned way to the outside of the bike for tire clearance when turning. A more useful (though still mechanically inefficient) drive system might be to replicate the 2wd Rokon Trainbreaker... maybe on a fat-tired mountainbike with really low gears for use in sand/snow.
There was a cable-driven attempt at a 2wd MTB is the '80s or '90s, IIRC.
DougC said:Here's one example of a nearly-suitable hydraulic motor-
http://www.surpluscenter.com/item.asp?i ... =hydraulic
It's 2+ inches diameter and 4.5 inches long. 6 lbs each, but could be lighter if made from aluminum and pared down (all the parts made thinner overall) since it's way overbuilt for this use.
This is fairly-easy since the only power connection is rubber hydraulic lines, which you can run anywhere and bend as you need to without losing much power.
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Another way I have heard of is to drive an electric motor off the back wheel, as a generator to drive another electric motor on the front wheel.
This is probably the easiest way to do it of all,,,,,, but it's expensive ($300+ per hub-motor) and the one person I know of who tried it said that the motor/generator didn't make much electricity at very low speeds, which was exactly when you'd want the 2WD effect to work.
It might be possible to rewind the "generator" to work better for this, but I dunno how those things are built inside..... ? I haven't ever played with e-bikes at all.
sean1960 said:
Yea but not all the time. Only when the front-wheel-drive is the only thing that's keeping you going.JoKeR63 said:...You'd lose close to 25% of your pedaling effort, ....
DougC said:Yea but not all the time. Only when the front-wheel-drive is the only thing that's keeping you going.JoKeR63 said:...You'd lose close to 25% of your pedaling effort, ....
Losing 25% of your power sounds bad, but if you can still get through some deep mud or up a muddy hill that you otherwise wouldn't have, it would still be a neat thing to have.
When you were rolling on regular ground I doubt if it would add much effort at all (other than the weight) since the motor and the generator would both be spinning at the same RPM anyway. The front motor wouldn't be any load on the rear-generator.
It would still be heavy and expensive tho'.
I like the hydraulics idea much better.
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