[h=1]It will take a 'baby elephant' to knock over this bike[/h] [h=1]It will take a 'baby elephant' to knock over this bike[/h] One of the most common accidents for motorcyclists is falling while turning a corner. But what if the bike could stand up by itself and would take "a baby elephant pushing it" to knock it over? Sumi Das examines how a bike using technology found on the International Space Station and the Hubble Space Telescope - gyroscopes - can not only work to reduce accidents but save energy along the way. [h=3]One of the most common accidents for motorcyclists is falling while turning? , and theres me thinking its a bike taking avoiding action of another motorist who didnt see you! , interesting stuff though and please be careful turning corners lol[/h]
I've seen this on the TV. It is kept upright by gyros and has a steering-wheel affair rather than handlebars, so I was wondering ... How do your counter-steer a 2-wheeler with a steering wheel? What effect the gyros would have on potential cornering mistakes? (e.g. braking ... standing the bike-up ... running wide ... ouch!)
Oddly enough I havent seen many bikes falling over when they go around corners.Only when ambition outweighs talent and the brakes get yanked on.
So, do they just go in a straight line until the baby elephant gets tired and then go round the corner while it's resting?
no doubt derived from this little um beauty? the racing ducati 125, which more than likely did fall down on corners