Boy that was hard to watch, I think it was edited by a butcher!
No, it´s a race day video. If you don´t want it edited that´s a different thing, but all of them are edited, at least this one is not trying to fool us like some others where they try to make us think it´s all a continuous shot when it´s notMaritimer wrote: ↑27 Jun 2018, 22:17Again, that's a promo video. I want to watch all 8 minutes of the drive lol
I did search on my own. Excuse me for thinking someone on here might have found something I overlooked. Don't take it so personally lolAndres125sx wrote: ↑28 Jun 2018, 08:52No, it´s a race day video. If you don´t want it edited that´s a different thing, but all of them are edited, at least this one is not trying to fool us like some others where they try to make us think it´s all a continuous shot when it´s not
Not sure what make you laugh tough. You can always try a search yourself instead of asking people doing that for you, and laughing when they do it...
The sound from straight cut gears arise from features that could potentially be engineered away. Imperfections, lubrication and tolerances; at a guess. Why would optimizing those things reduce efficiency. The sound waves have to come from somewhere.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Jul 2018, 10:44the most efficient gears are likely to be noisy - and quiet gears are unlikely to be the most efficient
neither will the electric 'motors' and their drive electronics be quiet
Efficiency and weight vs. gear ratio compromises. Top speed at pikes peak relatively low, and only one acceleration from very low speed. The weight of adding more gears, clutches, associated mechanisms, or CVTs. Hard to make a CVT as efficient as spur gears.
I think the energy lost to sound is completely negligible. Consider that sound power levels are typically measured in Milliwatts and powertrain power levels are typically measured in Kilowatts.roon wrote: ↑07 Jul 2018, 20:12The sound from straight cut gears arise from features that could potentially be engineered away. Imperfections, lubrication and tolerances; at a guess. Why would optimizing those things reduce efficiency. The sound waves have to come from somewhere.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Jul 2018, 10:44the most efficient gears are likely to be noisy - and quiet gears are unlikely to be the most efficient
neither will the electric 'motors' and their drive electronics be quiet