Sunday, June 9, 2013

Student HPV competition at Ferris State

 
The Ferris State University HPV team poses with its entry in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers eastern region competition, which Ferris State hosted for the first time. This was the fifth year the university has entered; with all of its vehicles being tricycles. (Ferris State Univ. photo)

Words and photos (except one) by Mike Eliasohn 

Twenty-five college and university HPV teams were in Big Rapids April 26-28, competing in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers eastern region student Human Powered Vehicle Challenge, hosted by the Ferris State University College of Engineering Technology.
      Teams came from as far as Florida, Missouri and New Hampshire.
      The Ferris State entry, a fully faired recumbent tricycle, was the only one from Michigan. 


In the ASME competition, vehicles have to accommodate various size riders, male and female. Ferris State's solution for quick rider changes was a bottom bracket that could be pivoted back and forth, made possible by having the chain go from the single chainring to an idler/pivot point beneath. (The low-tech method some teams used was easily removable seat padding; the shorter the rider, the thicker the pad.)

    There were 31 teams entered, but five no-shows, one of them being a senior engineering project from Calvin College in Grand Rapids. Other no-shows, according to Mark Archibald, chairman of  HPV competition for the ASME, included a team from Cairo University in Egypt, who couldn't get their visas in time, and one from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., which lost its funding due to the federal budget sequester. 
       Vehicles were scored in four  areas:  Design, speed event, innovation (new this year) and the 2.5 hour endurance race.




The entry from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Ind., shown here during the speed event, finished first overall. On the handlebars are a control to lower the left side landing gear, turn signals, horn and headlight switch. The wheel, which has an anti-lock brake, bolts directly to the fairing, not to a separate frame.

Missouri University of Science and Technology in Rolla finished second at Big Rapids. Its entry is shown here during the speed event.


The University of Toronto tricycle finished third.  It and the team and four other vehicles were back in the state May 18-19 for the Michigan HPV Rally.


      “Design” factors, with most of the score based on written reports submitted a month prior to the competition, included the overall design, analysis, testing, safety and aesthetics.
      The speed event on Saturday morning took place at Roben-Hood Airport, north of Big Rapids, with vehicles racing side-by-side 400 meters down a runway, from a standing start.        Each team had to compete with a male and female rider, with separate scoring for each.     Placings were determined on a double elimination basis, after an initial qualification run. That is, a team had to lose twice to be eliminated.
      Innovation judging took place Saturday afternoon at the airport. Each team had to show/demonstrate/explain their vehicle in front of  a panel of five judges, who evaluated capability, innovation and effectiveness and also could add to the score at their own discretion.



During the innovation judging, the team from the University of Florida in Gainesville demonstrates their InstaGator, all of which can be transported in the blue case. (The 18-inch wheels will fit inside, with the rest of the disassembled bike, but spokes might get bent, so the wheels were carried separately.)
When finished, the result is this front-wheel-drive recumbent, with rear-wheel steering (and two outrigger wheels). Holding everything together are eight torque couplings, two of which are necessary to hold the ASME-required rollbar. "A lot of our fun is trying new designs," said team member Daniel Ross of Merritt Island, Fla. The InstaGator earned second place in the innovation judging and ninth overall.

Each of the InstaGator's custom designed and machined couplings weighs 2.3 pounds. The frame is made from 1.5 inch .065 inch wall 4130 chromoly tubing. Fourteen U-F team team members made the 22-hour drive from Gainesville.


      The Sunday morning endurance event took place on a approximately 1.8 km course on the Ferris State campus. The course included a slalom zone, a hairpin turn and a mandatory stop sign. Changing riders was mandatory and at least one of the riders had to be female. They also had to stop five times during the race to pick up groceries.
     When the competition was over, Rose-Human Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Ind., was first, with 87.24 points.  Second was the Missouri Institute of Science and Technology in Rolla, 79.35. Third was the University of Toronto with its new streamlined tricycle, 69.52; fourth, Kansas State University in Manhattan, 68.60, and fifth, Ohio Northern University in Ada, 67.85.
      Ferris State, in its fifth year of competing, finished sixth with 66.30 points – fifth in design (73.1 points); fifth in innovation (19.1); 9th in the speed events (43.51), and 12th in the endurance race, with 23 laps completed. The University of Toronto tricycle finished first in that event with 33 laps.


Students from Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering in Needham, Mass., work on their vehicle April 27 at the airport.A goal in its design and construction was to save weight over Olin's previous vehicle, which weighed 70 pounds; the new one is 15 pounds lighter. Olin is an engineering-only college that started in the fall of 2002. It has about 350 students.


      The event at Ferris State marks 30 years that the ASME has sponsored student human powered vehicle competitions. The west region event this year was held at San Jose State University in California. There also was a Latin America competition at Universidad Simon Bolivar in Venezuela.  And starting later this year will be the first such competition in India.
     With perhaps 200+ student engineers competing at Ferris State, what's in it for them?  After all, the bicycle manufacturing industry employs relatively few engineers compared to many other industries, so presumably few, if any, will end up designing bicycles for a living. (Though I did talk in Big Rapids to the mother of University of Florida co-ed who was doing an internship at Specialized in California, which makes bicycles, equipment and rider gear. But she wasn't necessarily designing bicycles.


The University of Central Florida entry was the only one not using some form of rotary drive. The linear drive "pedals" move in unison, pulling on the non-continous belt, which makes the pulley go round. A chainring on the other side of the pulley drives a 3-speed hub, which runs to the 9-speed cassette on the rear drive wheel. This was the first year UCF has entered the ASME competition. For the five students on the team, it was a 1,300-mile drive from Orlando to Big Rapids.
 
    “Most employers seeing  any project like this see it very favorably,”
said Archibald, the ASME HPV competition chairman and a  professor of mechanical engineering at Grove City (Pa.) College, which had an entry in the competition. He said an ASME study showed the trait most important to employers is being able to work with others. The HPV competition obviously requires team members to work with fellow students to design and  build and then compete with their HPVs. 
     He said employers also like to see hands-on experience by prospective employees, which the HPV competition demonstrates.
     The ASME rules require participants to be engineering students, but they don't have to be studying mechanical engineering. Riders have to have been involved in the design or building of the bike. The purpose, Archibald explained, is to prevent a team from using riders who are studying non-engineering topics, who happen to also be bicycle racers.


The City College of New York entry had a carbon fiber frame, front wheel drive and rear wheel supported on one side only. There also was front fairing. Minus the fairings, it weighed 42 pounds.

      The HPVs competing showed a wide range, from very sophisticated to simple, reflecting how long the schools have been building HPVs and competing and budgets. Some vehicles were built of carbon fiber and others from rectangular steel tubing; some had full fairings and others, no streamlining at all.
      Each team also had to decide what approach to use – designing something they know will work or trying the experimental. For instance, the linear drive tricycle from the University of Central Florida in Orlando was the only entry not using conventional rotary drive. 
      “To be different,” UCF team member Jeremy Porta of Titusville replied when asked why they chose linear drive, And secondly, linear drive has a theoretical advantage over rotary drive, since it eliminates top- and bottom-dead-center. That is, with linear and lever drive, one foot is always pushing down, while the other is pulling up (if clipless pedals or toe clips are being used).
      However, with the UCF entry, both feet push down or pull up at the same time, rather than alternating.
The College of New Jersey (in Ewing) entry featured push-pull lever steering. The drive system consisted of triple chainrings in the front, a crossover drive and 8-speed internal hub as the final drive. The fairing consisted of inner and outer layers of fiberglass, with an 1/8th foam layer in-between.



    Although all the entries were recumbents, I found it interesting that the bikes I saw students riding when not competing were all conventional uprights.
In a follow-up e-mail, after reviewing a draft copy of this article, Archibald wrote:
"For your interest, we have had upright bikes compete, including a bamboo frame and some very nice carbon frames. In general, the uprights do well, but they are just not fast enough to win the races. I have seen some exciting drag races between the recumbents and uprights. Our length of 400 meters is long enough that the improved aerodynamics makes the difference, and the faired recumbents win in the end.
In addition to the schools already mentioned, also competing were Union College, Schenectady, N.Y.; Daniel Webster College, Webster, N.Y.; Central Piedmont Community College, Charlotte, N.C.; University of Missouri - Kansas City; University of Wisconsin - Madison; Mississippi State University; SOuthern Illinois University - Edwardsville; University of Southern Indiana; Virginia Tech; University of Kansas; West Virginia University; University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee; Ohio Northern University; and Southern Polytechnic State University, Marietta, Ga.
        

        

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

MHPVA annual meeting - March 2, 2013

NOTE: MICHIGAN HPV RALLY INFORMATION IS THE NEXT ENTRY DOWN.

TERRY GERWECK of Monroe shows his recently completed 20-inch wheel stretch cruiser at the MHPVA annual meeting. Terry is a co-founder of the organization.

By Paul Pancella, secretary

The recording secretary (me) did not arrive in time for the tour of the MSU Bikes shop, which was given by our host, Tim Potter, starting around 12:30.  I caught up with the group in a small conference room in the MSU Surplus Store and Recycling Center on the south part of campus around 1 p.m..
Tim Potter was finishing his description of what services are available at the  Surplus Store and Recycling Center.  This was followed by everyone present introducing themselves, at the invitation of our president, Mike Mowett.
Dave Johnson of Olivet has made a good recovery from hip replacement surgery.  He filled us in on the continued success of his family business, Too Cool T-shirt Quilts, which has even allowed him to do some traveling for business (bringing bikes along, of course).  Rick Wianecki brought pictures of a cedar-stripped fairing project he helped design, which was very impressive.
At 1:25  Rich Moeller, League of Michigan Bicyclists executive director, arrived.  His main theme was that LMB is slowly having success increasing the clout of the bicycling community with the state government in Lansing.  There has been some progress on legislation to allow a right turn to be signaled with the right arm, to protect cyclists as vulnerable road users similar to the way highway workers are protected, and to proceed through intersections legally when they are controlled by sensors which fail to register the presence of a cycle.  LMB is constantly working with law enforcement organizations to make sure officers on the street are aware of the rights of cyclists.  A new ‘Share the Road’ campaign is about to kick off.
The LMB annual meeting will take place on May 22 in Lansing and will again be combined with Advocacy Day, when members will be able to lobby their own representatives at the capitol.
Rich stayed for about 15 minutes of questions and discussion with the members present, much of which focused on “rumble strips”.  He can always be reached by email at Rich@LMB.org.  Anyone who does not already get the monthly e-mail alerts can request them by contacting Jenny@LMB.org. 
BUSINESS MEETING
Treasurer Bill Frey distributed his report of financial activity for the 2012 calendar year.  Once again, his stewardship has kept our association financially sound.  The small negative net change in our general fund can be traced to an advanced payment in support of the transponder system, and our reserve is sufficient to survive more than a year of operations with no income.
Copies of the report on last year’s winter meeting were distributed and approved as the minutes.
RALLY PLANNING
In general discussion of the scheduling for the 29th annual Michigan HPV Rally, May 18-19,  members present expressed preference for a weekend in May rather than June, acknowledging, of course, the constraints  due to other users of the tracky.
A proposal to add a separate event for arm-powered vehicles got a lot of discussion.  There was some uncertainty about whether enough competitors would actually show up for such an event.  The general recommendation was that race directors could be flexible on this point, offering competitors the choice to participate in our regular events and/or stage a separate event around lunch time on Saturday.
We did take a vote on replacing the kilometer time trial of recent years with a 1/8th mile drag race in the afternoon, which was approved.  The proposal was not for pairwise elimination heats for the whole field, but that everyone get a single run for  time, then if time permits, pair  the top four in two elimination rounds at the end.
President Mowett will look into having a steak fry at the lodge on Saturday evening.  Members were also supportive of having the concession facility open during the weekend.
Saturday May 18, 2013 Events (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.)
One-hour time trial  (two runs)
Hill climb / coast down 
Urban transportation contest,  if there is sufficient interest
HAND CYCLE  RACE (new event, depending on participation
1/8 MILE DRAG RACE (new event)  on back straightaway going opposite direction
Dinner at lodge or at local restaurant to be determined
Sunday 
200-Foot Speed Sprints (start on top the hill)
25-Lap Road Races (use last year’s new course: no passing through the wall as in previous years, no hill, a lap is about .43 mile, so 10.7 mile race, have two races)
Tricycle race (also depending on the number of competitors)

ELECTION 
The following slate was offered and elected by unanimous consent:
President: Mike Mowett, St. Clair Shores
Vice-president: Mike Eliasohn, St. Joseph
Secretary: Paul Pancella, Kalamazoo
Treasurer: Bill Frey, Grosse Pointe Farms
At large: Rick Wianecki, Okemos, and Bruce Gordon, Buchanan.

In addition, members expressed appreciation and encouragement for two important volunteer positions, Blog editor Mike Eliasohn and webmaster Bob Krzewinski, hoping both will continue their good work for the Association.  
We then heard a brief report about the recent HPRA event in Florida.  Mike Mowett won.  That was followed by discussion on the aging transponder system, but no action was taken.  President Mowett presented an overview of recumbent cycling events in the Great Lakes area, which was distributed with the agenda.  A brief, informal show-and-tell session started at about 3:40, with Terry Gerweck showing his homebuilt stretch cruiser and Mike Mowett showing his John Morciglio-built low racer.

Meeting adjourned at 4 p.m.


Monday, April 8, 2013

29th Michigan HPV Rally - May 18-19, 2013


The 29th annual Michigan Human Powered Vehicle Rally will be Saturday and Sunday, May 18-19, 2013, at the Waterford Hills sports car racing track on the Oakland County Sportsmen's Club grounds in Clarkston, near Pontiac.
The oldest such event in North America is open to riders of all human powered vehicles — recumbents, regular bicycles, tandems and handcycles. There are classes for streamlined, unstreamlined cycles, tandems, women, youth and tricycles. The rally is conducted using Human Powered Race America rules (www.recumbents.com/hpra/rulesand.htm). Note: HPRA rules require all vehicles to have a mirror or mirrors enabling rear vision to both sides. 
The track is 1.4 miles around, with nine turns and one hill.

ENTRY FEES: One day only, $30; both days, $40 (includes $10 MHPVA membership. $1 of each entry fee goes to support the League of Michigan Bicyclists. Test ride pass, $10, which includes MHPVA membership. Spectators free. 
Even if you have no interest in racing, come and see some unusual and some very fast bicycles and tricycles. Prize money will be awarded to top finishers in each class.

SATURDAY, May 18

Registration and technical inspection starts at 8 a.m.
One-hour time trial (streamliner, streetliner classes) - 9:30-10:30 a.m
One-hour time trial (stock, superstock, junior, women, tandem) - 11 a.m.-noon
Lunch (bring your own food or eat at nearby restaurant).
Hill climb/coast down (all classes) - 1:30-2:30 p.m.
1/8th mile drag races (all classes) - 3-4 p.m.
Urban transportation contest - in afternoon (cancelled due to event coordinator Paul Pancella being unable to attend rally)
Dinner at nearby restaurant - 6 p.m.

SUNDAY

200-Foot Sprints (all classes, flying start) - 8:30-9:30 a.m.
Tricycle race - 10 a.m.
Road race 1 (faster vehicles, 20 laps, 12 miles, no hill) - 10:30 a.m.
Road race 2 (slower Vehicles, 15 laps, 9 miles, no hill) - 11 a.m.
Awards ceremony by 1 p.m. (hopefully)

Concession stand will be open for lunch both days and possibly Sunday breakfast.
Location: Oakland County Sportsmen's Club: 4770 Waterford Road, Clarkston, MI 48346. For a map of the track, visit http://www.waterfordhills.com/downloads/facilitymap.pdf. 

For additional information, contact: Mike Mowett, 586-863-3902 or mowett@aol.com, or Mike Eliasohn, 269-982-4058 or mikethebike@acd.net.

TO GET TO THE RALLY:

From I-75, get off at exit 91. Take M-15 south to Dixie Hwy. (US-24). Turn left, continuing south about 1 mile and turn left onto Waterford Road, then proceed to track. 
If coming from the west, take U.S. 23 north (or south) to M-59 (Highland Road). Go east on M-59 to Airport Road, then left (north) to US-24. Turn left, then immediately right onto Waterford Road. Go about a half-mile to track. 


PLACES TO STAY:

MOTELS (with approximate distances/direction from Waterford Hills track)

Clarkston - Clarkston Motor Inn, 6853 Dixie Hwy. (US-10), 248-625-1522, 12 rooms, 2 miles northeast.

Clarkston - Olde Mill Inn of Clarkston, 5835 Dixie Hwy., 248-623-0300. Across Dixie Highway from Waterford Road leading to track. This is the closest motel to the track.

Hartland - Best Western of Hartland, 10087 M-59 at US-23, 810-632-7177, 61 rooms. About 18 miles west.

Waterford – Comfort Inn, 7076 Highland Road (M-59), 248-666-8555, 111 rooms. About 3 miles southwest.

Waterford – Waterford Motel, 2201 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph Road, 248-338-4061, 50 rooms. About 6 miles southeast.

Waterford – Holiday Inn Express, 4350 Pontiac Lake Road, 248-674-3434, 83 rooms. About 7 miles southwest..

Whitmore Lake - Best Western of Whitmore Lake, 9897 Main St. (off US-23, exit 53), 734-449-2058, 61 rooms. About 33 miles southwest.

CAMPING

Free camping available overnight Friday and Saturday at the Waterford Hills Sportsman Club, site of the HPV rally, starting at 6 p.m. Friday. Restrooms, showers available and possibly electrical hookups. 

STATE CAMPGROUNDS (www.michigandnr.com/parksandtrails)

Highland Recreation Area, 5200 E. Highland Road (M-59), White Lake, 248-889-3750. Two miles east of Highland, 

Holly Recreation Area, 8100 Grange Hall Road, Holly, 248-634-8811. Five miles east of Holly.

Ortonville Recreation Area, 5779 Hadley Road, Ortonville, 810-797-4439. Four miles northeast of Ortonville.

Pontiac Lake Recreation Area, 7800 Gale Road, 248-666-1020. Closest to Waterford Hills track, about 4 miles west. 

OAKLAND COUNTY 

Groveland Oaks County Park, 5990 Grange Hall Road, northeast of Holly, 248-634-9811.

PRIVATE CAMPGROUNDS (www.michcampgrounds.com)

Detroit Sportsmen's Congress Campground, 10150 E. Oakwood Road, Oxford, 248-628-3859, e-mail dscoffice@gmail.com, www.d-s-c.org

Monday, March 18, 2013

It IS about the bike: My 2012 racing season


MHPVA PRESIDENT MIKE MOWETT on his John Morciglio-built M1 during the 200-foot sprints at the Michigan HPV Rally in May 2012. In the stock class, he was second fastest in the top-speed event, 39.5 mph. (Mike Eliasohn photo)

By Mike Mowett, MHPVA president, St. Clair Shores

Last year was an exceptional racing season for me.  I set multiple stock recumbent records and won multiple races with my M1 carbon fiber lowracer built by John Morciglio of Waterford, Michigan.  In doing so I became perhaps the nation’s fastest-ever stock recumbent cyclist.  (Note: A stock class recumbent is one without an aerodynamic fairing. )
I was proud to race a homegrown product, be the 2012 state 20-kilometer time trial champion, and be faster than nearly all the “pro” Category 1 and 2 cyclists riding upright bikes that I raced last year.  My average speeds of 28- 30 mph on my M1 lowracer I could have only dreamed about in the past on any other bike.  Lance Armstrong’s book, “It's Not About the Bike,” is not correct when you have a bike as fast as a M1 – that is what I told people at the races last year.
I didn’t train any harder, but I went a lot faster due to what the M1 enabled me to do.  It was also a lot of fun to go fast and set speed records! 
John Morciglio has built a variety of carbon fiber recumbents over the past five years, but the M1 is his fastest – until he builds something faster!  He is a remarkably gifted craftsman with about 30 years of experience as a master woodworker building custom homes and other projects. He built a few carbon-fiber racing kayaks in the past,before building his first carbon bike.  John got into this sport about five years ago, after he was passed by Chris Evans, also of Michigan, riding a Velokraft NoCom lowracer at a local park.  John had no idea what type of bike had passed him, nor did he have a chance to catch up to Chris who was speeding along. 
John then found the recumbents.com website, and saw pictures of the NoCom.  So with little further input and working on his own, he designed and built the M1 lowracer.  He showed up at the Michigan HPV Rally in 2008, totally surprising everyone with his remarkable craftsmanship.  In his home workshop, he’s now built about 40 carbon fiber bikes, including the Apache dual 700 wheel highracer, the Arrowhead 650/700 midracer, the M2 ViperBlue midracer now raced by Brian Stevens of Grand Rapids, a swing-boom front-wheel-drive and a back-to-back tandem. He is currently building a three-wheeled tilting velomobile that will be convertible to a two-wheeler and has started making carbon fiber guitars.
The cost varies according to what the customer wants. The best way to reach John is by email: kmorciglio@comcast.netYou can see his latest builds, as well as photos of his past projects, at http://s363.beta.photobucket.com/user/JohnMorciglio/library

While the M1 may appear to be a NoCom lowracer bike, in my opinion it is better built with better design features.  The NoCom has been around for at least 10 years and most of the really fast guys have raced on one. 
The M1’s bottom bracket is adjustable fore-aft and integrated into the frame, whereas on the NoCom, the front boom has to slide with the bottom bracket in it.  I’ve heard that several NoCom owners have had problems with the booms cracking when they are clamping them in place.  Also it seems the wheel dropouts on some NoComs came misaligned, requiring straightening and reworking.  John’s frames have been perfectly aligned. 
The M1 frame is stronger and stiffer for more power transfer, according to some riders who have tried the NoCom and the M1.  The “pistol-grip” handlebars from John are more aerodynamic than the tiller bar on the NoCom.  The M1 has larger chainstays than the NoCom, which may help air flow behind the rider's shoulders, by acting like a small tailbox. 
It has carbon disk covers, also built by John, over its Velocity spoked wheels – 406 (small 20-inch) front and 700 (27 inch) rear.  John is now a Velocity wheel dealer so he can acquire wheelsets at a good price.  He uses TRP brakes, which are aerodynamic and sold for upright triathlon bikes.  He tucks them behind the fork for maximum aerodynamics.
 The M1 is a fast machine, at least 2 to 3  mph faster in average cruising speed compared to my previous “fast” Optima Baron and Challenge Fujin recumbents.  This is due primarily to its excellent aerodynamics, small frontal area and narrow “pistol-grip” handlebars that keep the hands and arms close to the body. 
It weighs just under 25 pounds with the components I have on it, including a lightweight 10-speed KMC chain, a huge 65 tooth chainring and custom 11-12-13-14-16-18-21-21-26-34 SRAM cassette that I built to give me a few big low gears for starting and lots of high gears for smooth shifts at high cruising speeds.  I’m a slow cadence pedaler (about 60 to 65 rpm) and I’ve found that going to bigger gears has allowed me more speed.  The high gear on the M1 is a rather large 154 gear inches; the low is 60.  To cruise at 30 mph requires pedaling at 65 rpm.  Yet at 60 rpm I can still climb some moderate-sized hills at 9 mph.
 I first test-rode the M1 at Stony Creek Metropark in the summer of 2011.  This is a course that I rode hundreds of times, so I knew all my personal bests on my other bikes at this site.  It previously took me about 27 minutes and 40 seconds to cover two laps, or 12 miles on my Challenge which is an average speed of 26 mph. 
I made a deal with John that if I could break my personal best riding the M1 I’d consider buying it.  Well I broke my personal best by an incredible 2 minutes on the M1 (averaging 28 mph) on that very first test ride.  Furthermore, I knew I could possibly win the state time trial championship on it, which I later did (see below).
 I’ve been racing for almost 25 years, primarily on an upright bicycle with a bodysock fairing.  I was 38 years old this past year. I finally switched to a recumbent about five years ago, but until this year, I was never as fast as the really “fast” racers who do our HPRA circuit and time trials.
My training usually consists of riding five laps or 30 miles at Stony Creek.  I  do this at a high intensity once or twice a week after work.  I also did some long rails-to-trails rides of about 40 to 50 miles on my upright hybrid bike, and found them more enjoyable than just going around in circles at the park! I paid attention to nutrition, but that’s it; nothing different compared to other years. 
To be successful in racing, you should race often, which is what I did, but sometimes too much racing and traveling affects your overall training schedule.
 I didn’t go to Battle Mountain in 2011, so used the saved money to purchase the M1 from John that fall. My first time racing it was in the last HPRA race of the year, on the half-mile Hawkeye Downs rspeedway in Iowa.  Sean Costin and I covered 27.9 miles finishing first and second respectively in the one-hour event, Sean sprinted by me to win by less than a second, but that was okay as I had let him draft me for much of the race, and I was really enjoying being out in front for once.  I looked forward to the 2012 season.
 For years, I have been noting records and the best performances at bicycle races, for uprights and recumbents. With the M1, I’ve become as fast as the fastest “professional” riders on uprights and faster than some of the fastest recumbent racers.  I went speeds and times that I could only dream about going on an upright, like a 30 mph average in a race or 40 kilometers in 52 minutes or 25 minute in a 20K.  Dreams can come true with the right bike. The following are my best accomplishments in races or time trials in 2012 – all with the M1.  I’ve described the courses, I was surprised that even on courses with a narrow turnaround on a two-lane road I was able to average the speeds I did.
 1) Northbrook, Ill., velodrome –  50-lap stock race record – I added 1 mph to the previous best by Sean Costin, and became the first to average nearly 30 mph in the U.S. for a 50-lap event.  I raced to the front at the start of the race.  Sean's chain derailed at the start, otherwise the race would have been even better.  I let a four-person paceline draft me throughout the race.  Thom Ollinger, Dennis Grelk, and Sean (when he caught up) were behind me enjoying the 30 to 32 mph speeds I was doing lap after lap. 
My race tactic was to just do a“time-trial,” meaning I wasn’t going to try to draft someone, then sprint around them at the end.  That is how most of these 50-lap races are won.  Since I led the whole time, I had no help from others to draft behind, but that is how I wanted to ride, at the front, doing essentially a time trial performance so the outcome would be all my own. 
This ranks as my most noteworthy performance of the year because it comes at the toughest and most contested recumbent event on the HPRA schedule.  Sean's previous record was 29.0 mph.  Now I’ve taken it to 29.9 mph.
2) Colavita Zipp 24.62 mile time trial in Celina , Ohio, a first-time challenge organized by Thom Ollinger – First overall amongst unfaired riders, second overall, 1 minute behind a streamlined Quest, 1 minute ahead of upright Gary.  Also bested the best recumbent riders.   I beat Thom, Dennis and Warren.  My time about equals Sean’s fastest time on a similar 40K course – the Double Bong.  If conditions had been a bit better, not so much wind and wider turns, I should have gone faster.  Time 52:22 for 24.62 miles, 28.20 mph average.
 3) Michigan state 20 kilometer time trial – First overall by more than a minute vs. a pro on an upright  bike, just off second and third  fastest speeds in history, and I did it in the rain.  Time 25:19, distance 12.42 miles, average 29.44 mph. 
4) 28.1 mph and 28.0 mph  New one-hour record averages at Stony Creek over 30.25 miles (5 laps), bested my 27.7 mph from last year. Stony Creek is my benchmark for performance and while a personal ride, setting a personal best here ranks on my list of best accomplishments.  Did best of 28.1 mph during the week of the Northbrook races, I think on Thursday night.  Time: 1:04, distance 30.25 miles, average 28.1 mph
 5) Defiance, Ohio – Overall winner by 2 seconds ahead of  Gary Painter on a upright bike.  First win in a major race overall. Distance about 12.69 miles, average 28.4 mph. Out and back course with a turnaround over rolling terrain and a couple of turns.
 6) 7-mile time trial (5 laps) at Waterford – overall record, first to break 15 minutes with a 14 minute 28+ mph average.  With over a thousand runs on that track by several hundred riders, including Category 1 and 2 riders, I’m the fastest ever by almost 30 seconds.  14:49 time record with a 2:54 first lap catching and passing a guy who later finished fourth overall in the state time trial on July 19, 2012.
 7) Setting one-mile record at over 30 mph in Florida in Maple Mile.  First to dip under 2 minutes.  We did three laps of a flat track with no banking and several left-hand turns that you had to navigate carefully at full speed.  Beat John Schlitter; we both ran twice.  Later he beat me in the lap races, I won the 200 meter race on the velodrome though, setting another record
 8) Cycling Saddlemen 10-mile time trial at Hines Park – I set the overall record and was the first to break 22 minutes, with a 21 minute something.  Out and back course with a turnaround over rolling terrain.
 9) St. Mary’s Ohio time trial – I was second overall by just 2 seconds behind a tandem team. We both had some difficulties (me at the turnaround by getting off my bike and the tandem with a van pulling out in the road at the end). Out and back course with a turnaround.
 10) Kenosha, Ill., velodrome – 50-laps, not as fast as at Northbrook, but still new record.  This performance might not be remembered as big, since it’s almost like second fiddle to Northbrook. 29 mph average.
 11) Michigan state 40 kilometer time trial– 12th overall. First time going out west to the Duck Lake course.  My first time officially breaking 1 hour in a 40K; I did a relatively good 55 minutes.  Course was two laps of a four-turn course with one good climb.
 12) 26 mph in the one-hour at the Michigan HPV Rally at Waterford, Hills Sean dropped out, though I was having trouble keeping up with him.  My best there, never even did 25 mph previously.  Completed 19 laps, which is a record for me.
 13) Calvin's Challenge – Riding a solo century in just over 5 hours, 12 minutes early in May on bumpy course, set recumbent class unfaired record, including a bathroom break, riding last 7 miles at 23+ mph average with John Schlitter, Kent Polk and Kurt Seagoval who all went on to ride 12 hours in records of 270, 269, 268 miles.
 And starting the 2013 season, I set more records at the Florida Challenge Feb. 23-24,. I set the 50-lap record there, again doing a time-trial tactic, so that’s my third venue on the circuit where I now own the records.  Last year I set the 200-meter sprint record, this year we had a shorter run-up, but still came very close to it.  And this year I set the kilometer record – all on the velodrome.
 My goal for the rest of the 2013 season is to at least go as fast as last year.  I hope to do BlackBear on either my M1 or in my streamliner. 
In the future I will give John’s Arrowhead, a 650/700 midracer a try to see if it faster.  If it is, then I will race it.  In the U.S., many racers are curious as to why the highracers in Europe are so fast, even though they should be less aerodynamic than a lowracer.  Part of the the answer may be that the bigger wheels have less rolling resistance. 

Monday, January 7, 2013

Doug Pertner builds a velomobile



THE STARTING POINT, Doug's made-in-England ICE Vortex

By Doug Pertner, St. Clair Shores

I was looking for a little more protection during upcoming cooler weather, so decided to build a fairing for my ICE Vortex tricycle, something that could be taken off without too much problem, if need be.
What you see here was the patterns made from cardboard for testing, which were held to the framework with wrapping tape..
The more-or-less finished fairing attaches the corrugated plastic side panels to some strips of aluminum bar stock with screws, nuts and rivets, covered with duct tape.
If the Vortex had center steering, my hands wouldn't have to stick out. But since it doesn't, a good pair of mittens has worked fine when the temperature was in the low 30s and the wind was blowing 10 mph.
I bought the 2011 Vortex used with about 100 miles on it. (Starting price new for the sub-29 pound Vortex is $3,860 – www.icetrikes.com).
I wondered why the guy sold it with so few miles and discovered he may have had the same problem I did. The crank geometry was off, so it hurt to pedal, that is, the cranks seemed to be too low for me. I experimented for three months and even thought of selling it, but finally found a position I could be comfortable with, which I achieved by folding a seat pad in half and putting it at the front of the seat, thus raising the front of the seat.
I still can't go fast with the Vortex. I am used to spinning about 90 rpm and higher. On the Vortex, the best I can do is about 70 to 84 rpm, so to compensate, I must push a higher gear to get into the 20 to 26 mph range, unlike on my Predator (an Optima Baron low racer with Doug's homemade fairing – see photo below).
But the more I ride the Vortex, the more I like it, because I don't have to put my feet down to stop. The fairing is an added bonus.
Doug with the more-or-less finished velomobile. The corrugated cardboard used for patterns is in the foreground.

I started turning the Vortex into a velomobile a year ago, but didn't start seriously working on it until September or October. It is an ongoing project, since I can only work on it outside. I have too much junk in my garage to work on it there and it's too wide to take it into my house. So when the weather permitted, if not at my job, the only hours I had to work on it were from 8 to 9 in the morning until 8 to 9 at night.
The windshield part of the fairing is a Windwrap GX , which sells for $224 plus $20 for tinting (mine is tinted), plus its One Point tilt mount, which clamps to the boom tube behind the bottom bracket, $375. Windwrap is owned by TerraCycle (www.t-cycle.com), which makes and sells all kinds of interesting accessories, mostly for recumbents. I also bought a light mount from them for $12. Add shipping and handling and the total was $660.96. Cha-ching.
The cover over the cockpit opening is Lycra stretch fabric.
I had been looking at trikes for a couple of years and finally bought the Vortex after an accident I had on the Predator at about 4:30 in the morning. I went about 3 feet and fell over. I had my small waist bag containing keys and phone on my side – which I usually don't do – and happened to fall on that side, cracking or breaking some ribs. That hurt for at least three months.

Unlike on a two-wheeler, not having to worry about stopping at stoplights, either trying to do track stands or unclip, has become great to me.
 The bad side is my average speed on the Vortex is 18 mph, and usually 16-17 mph in the city, with a maximum of 32 mph, compared to 36 mph on the flat in the Predator.
With my head exposed, I like being able to go out in the Vortex and not worry about the greenhouse effect. In the Predator, if the temperature and humidity were “wrong,” the inside would cloud up. Not being able to see where you are going is no fun and I've been there too many times.
Because of an operation this year, my training miles were down.(As of mid-December, Doug had pedaled 1,304.17 miles this year, compared to 2,000+ in a normal year. Maybe in 2013, riding more miles will improve my performance on the trike.

DOUG IN the almost finished velomobile. The cardboard (light brown) side panels were later replaced with corrugated plastic panels.
DOUG IN THE PREDATOR – an Optima Baron with homemade fairing – at the Michigan Human Powered Speed Challenge in 2009 at the Ford Motor Co. proving grounds near Romeo. On the 5-mile oval, he pedaled 100 miles in 4 hours, 3 minutes, 52 seconds for an average speed of 24.6 mph. He's gone as fast as 37.2 mph in the Predator, but not at the MHPSC.

Editor's note: Doug also wrote a review of his Louis Garneau Vorttice Black Knight aero helmet (www.louisgarneau.com): 
I have worn it a couple of times in cold weather, including Dec. 23, when it was 30-34 degrees. It looks like that was the last day I will wear it for a while.
European sizes run differently, it would seem, than in the U.S.A., which I should have learned by now. It seems their sizes run one or two smaller sizes than ours. I wish I had bought a small and a large size (there's no medium), then return the one that didn't fit right.
My head size fit in the small size range (20.5-22 inches), but the small size I bought fits really tight. I have a bit of a problem with the visor and my glasses. If I wear a balaclava, it helps pad my ears, but, did I say it fits tight?
The helmet design helps circulate the air, but I never got cold. The small vents on top and the funny looking slashes in the visor some way (so far) keep the visor and my glasses clear, that is, no fogging, which is the opposite of my experience with other helmets in past years.
When I first put the Black Knight on, my wife said, “Yep, your head looks like a golf ball.” It has dimples and a few other do-dads that I assume direct the air flow. Those dimples make me wonder if covering my bike with them would make me go faster.
Laugh if you want, but my grandson went to a Pinewood Derby some years ago and a kid showed up with a car that looked like someone beat it with a ball peen hammer... Guess who won?
I can't really say what kind of aero effect the Black Knight has, but with its short tail, I can get inside my partially enclosed trike with no problem. There's been no rubbing problems.
Despite the price (manufacturer's list price is $260), I bought the Vorttice Black Knight because I liked the name, it looks neat, especially with the visor down, it keeps my head warm and – a special, welcome treat – my glasses clear.
Also, the strap adjuster is easy to get to and requires only one hand to adjust the wheel on the back of helmet, Just turning it one way or another gives a good fit.
It will be interesting to see how the helmet operates in hot and humid air. The strange sticker warning on top says: "Do not expose the helmet to the sun or any other potential source of heat for a long time." Well, there goes my competing in the Ironman triathlon in Hawaii this year.