Rubber Tracked Bicycle Is Horribly Inefficient

Wheeled bikes are efficient machines, and most cycling speed and distance records are held by them. However, [The Q] has a taste for weirder creations that amuse perhaps more than they serve as viable transportation. His latest experiments revolve around tracked propulsion methods.

The build is a wheelless bike that relies on long thin tracks mounted to a mountain bike frame. The tracks carriers are fabricated using steel box section fitted with cogged rollers. The tracks themselves are made using a pair of bicycle chains joined with welded steel bars. Theyā€™re fitted with slices of rubber cut out of traditional bike tires for grip. The rear track is driven from the bikeā€™s pedals, while the front is merely left to run freely.

By virtue of its wide, flat tracks, the bike actually stands up on its own. Itā€™s capable of riding in a straight line at slow speed, albeit relatively noisily. Steering is limited by virtue of the flat tracks, which donā€™t operate well at an angle to the ground. Since the tracks only contact the ground at a point, too, the bike has very high ground pressure, which would make it likely to sink into anything less solid than asphalt.

The build is relatively similar to [The Q]ā€™s previous efforts to build a supposedly square-wheeled bike. What weā€™d really love to see at this point is a tracked bicycle that actually made the best of the technology ā€“ by being both swift and capable of crossing soft, marshy terrain. Video after the break.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/pOdAKDo

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