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- Newsgroups: rec.skate
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!eagle!ariel.lerc.nasa.gov!piltch
- From: piltch@ariel.lerc.nasa.gov (Nancy Piltch)
- Subject: Re: Wheel lore
- Message-ID: <31DEC199211164484@ariel.lerc.nasa.gov>
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- Sender: news@eagle.lerc.nasa.gov
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- Organization: NASA Lewis Research Center
- References: <1992Dec29.042346.20453@serval.net.wsu.edu> <C01Apx.Lt9@csn.org> <38196@cbmvax.commodore.com> <C033JA.3MJ@csn.org> <38222@cbmvax.commodore.com>
- Distribution: na
- Date: 31 Dec 1992 11:16 EST
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <38222@cbmvax.commodore.com>, grr@cbmvax.commodore.com (George Robbins) writes...
- >In article <C033JA.3MJ@csn.org> pae@teal.csn.org (Phil Earnhardt) writes:
-
- .. [about hardness and rebound]
-
- >I'm not sure that there is any direct relation. If you've seen one of
- >those things that bounces ball bearings, you can see that even hard
- >objects can give good rebound. Whether rebound really matters or not
- >is a good question, testing to see if a wheel bounces would tell you
- >it's "live" and not 85% clay filler, but not much more.
-
- A nice demo that they're not the same is in an item sold by Edmund
- Scientific called something like Happy and Unhappy Balls. One (presumably
- the happy one) is a "superball", one of those things that bounce extremely
- well; the other one doesn't bounce.
-
- It's not clear to me either exactly what properties are needed in wheel
- materials. You would want something that "sticks" well to the road
- or other skating surface, absorbs vibrations without soaking up skater
- energy (probably contradictory requirements), and has low rolling
- resistance. Meeting these conditions is a non-trivial materials
- development problem.
-
- >> Finally, Kryptonics has a disclaimer on its new wheels warning people that
- >> polyurethane wheels are not intended for speeds over 30MPH. Does anyone know
-
- >Hard to say. It could be the point at which the wheel starts to show the
- >effect of centrifugal force, but more likely it's just a notion of what
- >constitutes a maximum skating speed where might fall without a guarantee
- >of serious injury.
-
- In view of the change in properties with temperature, it could also be
- a point where the material heats up enough to change its properties too
- much, possibly even to the point of damage to the wheel.
-
- Nancy Piltch piltch@ariel.lerc.nasa.gov
- NASA Lewis Research Center, Cleveland Ohio 44135
-
-