I read a lot of scientific
texts on all sides of the fence and
am always amazed at how often
opposing groups both have “adequate”
data to back up a hypothesis.
Quantum physics comes to mind,
with its concepts being spread not
only in scientific communities but
spiritual communities as well. Will
we ever know the truth?
Terry
I am writing to express my appreciation
of your editorial. The
basic point is one which needs to
be stressed (especially outside the
research community, where most
folks already know the basic underlying
issue). And your phraseology
“...haul out peer-reviewed research...
and wave them ... as though
warding off vampires with a crucifix,” is particularly felicitous.
Jack Lloyd
the perfect car
The letter regarding working people
needing working vehicles (Letters,
Jan. 14) got me thinking. The problem
is that vehicles cost too much
for most people to own more than
one or two. Thus, each vehicle must
be versatile enough to meet several
needs and so ends up as a compromise
that does not excel at fulfilling
any one. As the letter writer states,
he really needs a -ton truck but
the mileage is too poor for everyday
driving. And even the half-ton
trucks he and his wife settled for are
not that good on the highway.
Not being enamored with surrounding
myself in fancy sheet
metal (like the knights of old) to
display my status, I have a problem
finding inexpensive yet versatile
transportation. I ran two Nissan
Frontiers into the ground, but the latest
version is merely a jackedup
four-door sedan with an open
trunk. So I tried a Ford Ranger with
a 2.3-liter engine, but it only gets
14 mpg. (The old Frontiers got at
least 20 mpg.)
When I commuted to work, I
would drive 10 miles each way by
myself. A motorcycle was out of the
question due to safety and comfort
considerations. What really would
have worked well is a battery-powered
two-seater I could plug in at
work to recharge for the trip home.
But it would have to have been inexpensive
so that I could afford another
car dedicated to family trips
as well as a separate small car for
my wife to run errands and get to
work.
George Binns
To reduce U.S. dependence on foreign
oil and reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, we have to change our
means of transportation, primarily commuter transportation. Here’s
my idea, the Public Personal Mover,
and reasons behind it.
Public mass transportation for
commuters is so inefficient that
even with incentives, it will never
be but a marginal choice for the
general public. Trains and buses
make stops, and buses get stuck in
traffic jams just like cars. Still, we
have to wean people away from
using 3,000-lb vehicles to take one
person back and forth between the
same destinations five days a week.
The Public Personal Mover
would let you decide where and
when to go, and get there without
stopping, waiting, or transfers. It
would have most the advantages of
personal vehicles without the disadvantages
of mass transportation
such as wasting energy on too few
or no passengers. The mover would
weigh about 200 lb, be propelled by
an electric motor, and ride along a
rail which would also supply power. The rail would be above the streets
and highway medians. Users would
summon a single or two-seat version
at a station by cell phone or
other PDA. Once seated, users enter
destinations with GPS technology.
The mover would then roll from the
station to the main rail and navigate
through the network to your destination
without stopping. Computers
would control the logistics of seamless
entry and exit to and from the
main rail and junctions and prevent
collisions. Such a system could be
built along highway medians from
the commuter parking lots into the
city and be expanded as its popularity
increased. Experience will show
how many cabins would be needed
at any given time and location.
Without some revolutionary
change in our everyday behavior
we will never be able to even make
a dent in our ever-increasing energy
consumption.
Fred Rapp
One thing I don’t like about your
idea is the rail. You’re limited to
only going where the rail goes. If
the rail stops a half mile from your
house, how do you finish your trip
in bad weather or if you’re carrying
something heavy? This is the same
problem with most modern publictransportation
systems. What is my
120-lb wife supposed to do with 40 lb
of groceries when this thing drops
her off some distance from the house
in 10°F weather? Transfer the stuff
to a car? I know her well enough to
know she wouldn’t even consider this
alternative. For your idea to work,
I believe you would have to string
a rail literally to every doorstep in
America.
I think you are better off forgetting
the rail and hope for a source
of electrical power with enough capacity
to just get us from point A to
B. This is the number-one research
topic at automakers right now.
Leland Teschler
Impossibly thin
I really enjoyed the article on
Chevy’s new engine (“Chevy’s RO7
racing engine: A chip off the old
small block,” Feb. 7). But in the
third to last paragraph, it says a water
passage in the engine block is
0.00001-in. wide. This seems quite
narrow. Is it a typo?
John Zambito
We received several letters and phone
calls asking if the width of the water
passage in the Chevy RO7 engine
was really 0.00001 in. In fact, the
figure should have been 0.1 in. The
editor misheard one-hundred thousands
as one-hundred thousandth.
Editor
Gadget guesses
Is that a Renault Robin? Sure looks
similar.
David
This looks like a version of an “AeroCar”. (This would be the car
portion.)
Berry
That gadget is a gyrocar.
James
The gadget is the infamous Revette or Dale as it was later known. It
was presented in a stock swindle by
a cross-dressing man.
Jerry
This looks like a Dymaxion car designed
by Buckminster Fuller.
Edward
Name that
gadget
Be the first to identify this device from a past issue of Machine Design
and win a fabulous prize, along with the honor of seeing your name in
an upcoming issue, e-mail entries to smraz@penton.com and put “Gadget”
in the subject line.
No one correctly identified the vehicle that first appeared in the Feb. 7
“Name that Gadget.” It is the prototype for an electric, threewheeled
vehicle built for the Swedish telecommunications
administration in 1981. It could carry one person plus 100
lb of cargo and ran off four 12-V batteries. Charging took
10 hr and it would get 30 miles/charge.
Name that
gadget
Be the first to identify this device from a past issue of Machine Design
and win a fabulous prize, along with the honor of seeing your name in
an upcoming issue, e-mail entries to smraz@penton.com and put “Gadget”
in the subject line.
No one correctly identified the vehicle that first appeared in the Feb. 7
“Name that Gadget.” It is the prototype for an electric, threewheeled
vehicle built for the Swedish telecommunications
administration in 1981. It could carry one person plus 100
lb of cargo and ran off four 12-V batteries. Charging took
10 hr and it would get 30 miles/charge. |