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Came across this YouTube video. Never knew that radials were used on cycles.
Hey Guest!
The ones with the engine on the frame appear to have enough ground clearance by the tire size. No problem with the radial engine placed in the front wheel.I can imagine the two lower heads hitiing a railroad track.
Unless you get a flat tire? How does that work?The ones with the engine on the frame appear to have enough ground clearance by the tire size. No problem with the radial engine placed in the front wheel.
Can't tell you since I don't have one. It would be nice to have a split rim in the front to make changing the front tire easier.Unless you get a flat tire? How does that work?
I wondered the same thing. From what we can see in the video it appears to be a direct drive. Just my WAGDo any of those have some sort of transmission? I couldn't tell.
In most of the aircraft WW-1 roterys the crankshaft was bolted to the airframe and the prop was bolted to the crankcase, the crankcase spun not the crank, odd but it worked. Your right Tom, no variable throttles, some called them Blip throttles.I'm no mechanic (no kidding!), but WW1 rotary (not radial) aircraft engines couldn't change speed. You controlled the engine by cutting ignition in and out.
In the video, were the guys on the rotary cycles changing speeds somehow?
TM