The Future Of Cycling: Smart, Hover & Light Up
Bikes
At MIT’s SENSEable City Lab, the thoughts of the
technologically minded aregeared towards the field of hybrid transport. They
have recently designed the Copenhagen
Wheel. It is a wireless device that turns any ordinary
bicycle into an electronic hybrid.
The wheel is designed to capture
energy when the rider is going over some easy terrain, such as downhill, and
then stores it in a battery pack for later use. Then, when needed, the saved
energy is used to give the rider an electronic push when traversing difficult
terrain. The device has a sensor that learns the rider’s particular style
and it can also anticipate certain aspects of the terrain ahead, including road
conditions and even carbon monoxide levels! The wheel can be controlled
via a smartphone app; they can lock it, track usage statistics and select the
level of motor assistance. The startup, Superpedestrian, brought the
wheel to market last month and they have now started taking pre-orders for only
$799.
Aerofex Hover Bike
Flying cars and hover boards in Back
To The Future Part 2 made us think next year that we would all be flying around
our daily routines. Unfortunately, that is not the case (shame, because I
really wanted a hover board!) But we need not fret too much as a
California-based engineering company Aerofex has
created a flying “hover bike” that looks like it has been taken from the new
Star Wars movie set. This “Jedi bike” hovers due to its ducted fans and its
operating height is low-altitude but can soar up to a maximum 15 feet (4.6 meters).
The current version is a proof-of-concept model used for development, but
Aerofex says it is currently working on a production version.
Blaze
The number of cyclsists on the road
in the last few years has dramatically increased, which is great for loads of
reasons. But because of this, the amount of cyclist casualties has risen
considerably also. But all is not lost in the battle of Car V Bike as to
combat the issue, a physics student from Brighton
University, in England, has invented Blaze.
The device is a front-mounted lamp that projects a green laser image in front
of a bicycle at a distance of five meters, to allow other road users see that
there is a cyclist coming. The aim of this project is to help prevent vehicles
from turning across a cyclist’s path.
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