View Single Post
  #30   Report Post  
Posted to alt.electronics,alt.home.repair,alt.sci.physics,uk.d-i-y
Steven Steven is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 49
Default How can you possibly fall off a self balancing scooter?



"NY" wrote in message
o.uk...
"Steven" wrote in message
...


"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message
news
On Thu, 24 Jan 2019 21:26:37 -0000, Steven wrote:



When say it decides you are falling backwards, and moves back,
while you are standing on it, the complete assembly of you and
the scooter moves back and it doesn't change where it is relative
to the person's center of gravity.

Let's say you're stood stationary and upright on it, not moving. Now,
you lose your balance a little and begin to fall over backwards. Your
feet tilt backwards, the device senses this, and moves backwards.
You're now still over the device


Yes, but it can't move under the center of gravity while your feet are
still on it.


You've forgotten Newton 3: "for every action, there is an equal and
opposite reaction".


Nope.

It moves the wheels by the motor exerting a torque on them. This causes an
equal and opposite torque on the scooter-and-human,


Yes.

thus moving the person's C of G relative to the axle


Nope, because the tilt of the human doesn't change much.

until the C of G is once again directly over the axle.


Fraid not.

This is how it corrects for the person leaning too far forwards or
backwards.


No, it applies force, it doesn't shift the CoG.

If the person leans back, the sensors detect that the scooter is tipping
backwards, and rotates the wheels backwards, thus tipping the person
forwards.


By force, not by moving the CoG