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Speed will be limited by the topography of the terrain, the surface conditions, weight of the vehicle and peddling power of the passenger.
Rolling resistance is equal to weight multiplied by rolling resistance coefficient. According to engineering toolbox, the coefficient for ‘car tire on solid sand, gravel loose worn, soil medium hard’ is 0.04-0.08.
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/rolli … _1303.html
For vehicle mass 150kg (70kg man + 80kg vehicle), this would result in a rolling resistance of 22.4-44.7N on Mars. Assume that cyclist power is 250W on average; this would put top speed at 5.6-11.2m/s (20-40km/h) on flat terrain. On hilly terrain or sandy soils, speed will be lower.
4m2 of solar panels covering the vehicle would boost power by ~100W and may only weigh a few kg, so would be a worthwhile addition. On the plus side, electric motors have excellent torque at low speed. So even if power is low, the vehicle will not stop entirely.
Roll-out solar panels would increase weight, but would allow the vehicle to increase range by allowing drinking water to be recycled and oxygen supply to be regenerated. The vehicle should probably stop between late morning and mid-afternoon when insolation is greatest. If this were done, a lithium ion battery capable of storing 1kWh would weigh of a few kg and would extend daily range by ~100km and would greatly reduce reliance on pedalling. All depends on how lightweight those solar panels can be.
I am assuming the astronaut could be equipped with a minimum counter-pressure suit that is relatively lightweight (for excursions away from the vehicle). How much would this weigh?
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Bikes on Mars make sense with an MCP suit, but not with any of the full pressure suit designs I have seen proposed. Most of those would make it impossible to get up alone, if you fell over. Plus, if you puncture a full pressure suit, you are dead if you cannot get inside before it deflates, period, end of issue. Not true with MCP, which you can "patch" with a tight wrap of duct tape. Fall over with a bike on Mars, and the odds are very high you will suffer a puncture.
I don't know figures for Dava Newman's modern incarnations of MCP, but the old 1968-vintage version from Paul Webb was 85 lb for the vacuum-protective underwear plus a helmet and breathing bag, plus a LOX makeup backpack. To that you could add 15 lb of protective unpressurized outerwear, and still fall near 100 lb "turnkey" for the suit. Don't know how long Webb's backpack would supply oxygen, though. No air conditioner or water-cooled underwear needed. You sweat right through the garment into vacuum, just like here into not-vacuum, just more efficient.
GW
GW Johnson
McGregor, Texas
"There is nothing as expensive as a dead crew, especially one dead from a bad management decision"
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Thanks Antius for the rolling resistance coefficient stuff as someday I may build something for earth bound use....
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For perspective on the rolling resistance coefficients, consider the rolling resistance coefficient for car and light truck tires on a hard pavement like asphalt or concrete: 0.014-0.015 typical. I actually measured the forces with a spring scale, and they do indeed come out pretty close.
I can certainly tell a huge difference between riding a bike on pavement versus soft dirt, even one with balloon tires. I'd be surprised if the coefficient of a bike on Mars isn't above the range Antius quoted. Maybe more like 0.10 or possibly higher still in really fine, soft stuff. The deeper you sink in and start plowing, the higher it goes.
The softer the sand, the more the tires sink in, and the higher the rolling resistance coefficient. This can get to the point that the wheel quits turning, and you are back to static/kinetic friction behavior, complicated by a plowing force. While weights are lower due to reduced gravity on Mars, there's an awful lot of loose sand and fine dust in which to sink. Any bike is going to need big balloon tires to stay on top where the rolling resistance is not too high.
GW
Last edited by GW Johnson (2016-06-14 08:35:13)
GW Johnson
McGregor, Texas
"There is nothing as expensive as a dead crew, especially one dead from a bad management decision"
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Most Martian terrains photographed so far are either sandy, as you have suggested, or rubble strewn. In both cases, a two-wheeled bike would not appear to be very workable, from the point of view of surface pressure and rolling coefficient with sand, and stability in rubble strewn fields. Seems more likely that something like a quad bike would work better, using balloon tyres and an Kevlar inner lining.
I did some research last night on P/W ratio of flexible solar panels and energy density of lithium ion batteries. A 1kWh Lithium battery would weigh a minimum of 5kg. The flexible panels I was looking at had an efficiency 22%. They wouldn't say how much they weigh.
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Well, given an lightweight MCP suit, and a roll of duct tape to patch punctures "on the go", something resembling a mountain bike with big "Fat Frank" tires might actually work on some of the mixed sand/rock terrains.
It is amusing to think about a sight like that.
GW
GW Johnson
McGregor, Texas
"There is nothing as expensive as a dead crew, especially one dead from a bad management decision"
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I took the time to fix the artifacts and shifting for the first 3 pages....
I went back through the topic to see if we talked about tires but much to my amazement we did that in another topic....
So we will need to do some experimenting here on earth to simulate the conditions that have been putting holes in the Rovers tires so that we can make them to resist the terrain of mars.....
Agreed that the MCP suits would be the way to go.....this would allow for low pressure inside the car while pedaling so as to keep it on the ground if we bump or bounce.....
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Well, rover "tires" have typically been metal of late. I sure as hell hope they have learned driving Curiosity's aluminum tires on sharp rocks is a very bad idea.
Quite frankly, I think the Goodyear run-flat tire design would have been a more durable choice for a design startpoint, even if they had to warm the rubber to keep it flexible. Curiosity is nuclear-powered, after all. There has to be some heat to spread around.
GW
GW Johnson
McGregor, Texas
"There is nothing as expensive as a dead crew, especially one dead from a bad management decision"
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Antius I think these are about what you have discribed in "flexible panels of efficiency 22%" High Efficiency Flexible Solar Panels with SUNPOWER cells
http://rvsolarsupplies.com/wp-content/u … ebsite.pdf
SunPower 40W Solar Panel
Flexible, lightweight three panel design folds to 11" x 11" and weighs only 2.2 lbs making it ultra portable
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Bump just wondering if a 4 wheeler built for two might work after modifications for mars....
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A single seat collapsed to save space while stowed is not a bad thing once we are in a dome but for safety 4 wheels would be safer.
This is an exaple of the adult sized vehicle that can be pedal powered....
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I found it interesting that a company that makes automobiles, trucks and lots of other stuff would be making a bike. Sure it will not be a made for mars model but its sure is engineered for use.
GM's next electric vehicle is a bicycle
its electric and folds up
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You will probably need bigger wheels. These are street designs, not for rough terrain.
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I would agree that a more mountain bike tire and frame design would be better but for mars cold and how sharp the rocks are we will need a different materials to make use of. Its also why I was posting to the recumbent bike topic as well. But I think for mars a quadricycle is more likely to be used.
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Apart from base operations, I fail to see the purpose of vehicles that don't provide sufficient power or protection to assure the survivability of the astronauts. Some variation of electric motorcycles could still be useful for transportation around a base on Mars, provided that it has sufficient speed to race to a radiation protected habitat module in the event of a SPE / CME headed towards Mars. Pedal-powered vehicles are probably out of the question in light of that requirement, but electric quad cycles should still work acceptably well.
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The pedal powered vehicles which I think are possible are a recharge generator function rather than an all the time direct drive to the wheels. It is meant to give exercise and yet get crew to points of short distance from the base. If the batteries for electric drive are low just pedal to top them back to full and get going to the shelter.
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There's nothing wrong with using pedal-power as a backup, and such vehicles certainly work well on Earth, but nobody using them is wearing a space suit of any kind. These concepts can be tested in a vacuum chamber to illustrate the problems with implementing them in a practical manner. If the MCP suits do not impair user mobility to the point of futility, then perhaps pedal power is worthy of further development into a Mars application.
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If a pressurised suit is used, putting the suited human into an enclosure which is itself pressurised, will restore his/her freedom of movement. So a tri or quadricycle with a transparent, or partly transparent enclosure and source of pressurising gas might be made to work. Clearly this will be much heavier than the simple street machine so the human will need electric assistance. Failure of the enclosure pressure leaves him in his suit but not easily able to pedal, so the electrical system must be able to get him home.
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Elderflower,
The notion of riding a bike in a traditional space suit is absurd. The astronauts on the moon had difficulty getting back up after falling over. A MCP suit, on the other hand, would provide greatly increased mobility and the ability for sweat to cool the body. People actually ride bicycles while wearing the same materials that Dr. Webb's Space Activity Suit was made from and they also wear helmets and carry backpacks. If the rider has a MCP suit on, then I don't see the need to put them in a beach ball with a motorcycle inside it.
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I would think that you might want to avoid pedaling as that would consume Oxygen, so electric as the primary method. Depressurized while using a MPC suit, but under pressure if you want to sleep or do a body function. Maybe even pressurize with Martian atmosphere while you still have a helmet on? Then also you could carry extra consumables. So, then it is a Mars cart that you could pedal if you absolutely have to.
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Void,
For all practical purposes, any vehicle sent to Mars needs to be powered. If the vehicle is light enough to make a manual operation mode possible, then that'd be great. You're not going to go on a Tour de Mars ride away from the base, unless you can survive a SPE/CME without substantial protection, so I fail to see the point in trying to use bicycles for long distance rides. It's a cheap and lightweight way to get from one part of the base to another, provided that you can make EVA's routine events. For a variety of reasons, they're just not, so most vehicles must be pressurized (read too heavy for practical pedal power) and EVA's will be reserved for activities that absolutely require them.
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OK, that seems sensible.
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Going on the electrified bike even on earth its finally developing. Harley-Davidson's electric motorcycle signals a big change for the legendary but troubled company
http://mypodride.com/podride-product-specifications/
Pedal RPM to speed table
https://atrf.info/papers/2018/files/ATR … per_81.pdf
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Bikes would fit well into a mars mobility base plan where you explore and do research and then mover to the next location to drop roots and explore once more.
A directory of manufacturing of 4 wheeled pedal powered bikes
it also has other wheeled combinations.
Here on Earth bikes are much safer than the fear of suit puncher would be on Mar. Then again on earth its the energy + cost factors that we see for Earth use but thats not the concern on Mars.
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