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[email protected] kfvorwerk@gmail.com is offline
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Default Three wheeled car

On Nov 27, 12:08*am, David Billington
wrote:
wrote:
On Nov 26, 7:12 pm, Tim Wescott wrote:


On 11/26/2010 08:38 PM, Jordan wrote:


On 11/27/2010 6:24 AM, Tim Wescott wrote:


Every time I see one of those I start totting up the manufacturing cost
of a differential vs. two undriven wheels in front, and I wonder _why_
they went and made the damn things that way.


I think the Reliant started as a commercial type vehicle, so load
carrying capacity dictated an axle and two wheels at the rear. The
Messerschmidt 3-wheeler on the other hand, grew out of an invalid car -
transport for post-WW2 German injured servicemen. Both were built to a
low price initially, so losing a wheel made sense then.
Apart from handling problems, having 3 tracks makes avoiding potholes
etc difficult. Like Morgan did, a move to 4 wheels and only 2 tracks is
the right way, but driven within their limitations, 3 wheelers look like
fun.


In a lot of jurisdictions a 3 wheeler counts as a motorcycle, even if it
is functionally more like a car. *So there's advantages of taxes and
relaxed regulations.


I hadn't considered the pothole angle.


--


Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Serviceshttp://www.wescottdesign.com


Do you need to implement control loops in software?
"Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" was written for you.
See details athttp://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html


Morgan's making 3 wheelers again.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/...c-car-firm-Mor...
Karl


Seems they may be making what the Seattle based companyhttp://cycle-car.com/index.htmhas been building under license in the US.


Maybe*they're*doing*the*construction*for*Morgan.*T here's*nothing*on*the*Morgan*site*about*the*3*whee lers.*I've*only*seen*stuff*about*them*in*the*newsp apers.
Thanks
Karl
Karl