I think this is cool. Price tag is pretty up there though.
http://www.gizmag.com/jw-speaker-ada...-review/41191/
I think this is cool. Price tag is pretty up there though.
http://www.gizmag.com/jw-speaker-ada...-review/41191/
Cool post thanks. Great simple application - make it so on all.
Best quote The highest additional beam on each side only angles up about 30 degrees from horizontal, and I think another 10 or 15 degrees would be helpful. Then again, 7 inches is a common Harley size, and 30 degrees might be more than enough for the cruiser crowd.
Nice bit of kit.....you'll get to see the possoms on the side of the road better before runnin em over .
....wherezz that track go
Presumably this setup has a lean angle sensor of some sort. Can anyone tell me how they work.
On a bike, in theory at least, the cornering forces resolve so as to act down a line joining the bike's C of G to the tire contact patch. So some sort of pendulum device won't work.
I suppose that some sort of G meter might work: higher G forces = harder cornering = more lean, but that's just guesswork.
How is it done?
I may not be as good as I once was, but I'm as good once as I always was.
This might be of interest
http://youtu.be/U5Typ14RQr4
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Unless it goes up and down as well as side to side it's useless.
Oh yeahhhhh!
Seriously though, I've tinkered with AUX lighting for pointing into corners and unless it's got a massive spread, or you ride exclusively on the flat, it's almost a waste of time. Having something mounted to your helmet is the tits, other than the problems that come with having something mounted to your helmet![]()
I've mounted a set of Denali D1 (about 10W per spot) on the front, angled up and out. I didn't think they were doing much until I removed them... they were quite effective at lighting up the hole when cornering.
Otherwise, just add more lights. Only issue is when you have to turn them off for oncoming vehicles, then it's like you've got nothing at all![]()
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
MEMs gyro and accelrometers, combination thereof are call 6dof IMUs https://www.google.co.nz/search?q=sp...CtC8zD0gS9nbZg
You could just use a single axis gyro, but you really need the accelerometers to make it go back to zero.
You'd probably want a soft fill when they turn on, unexpected bright lights may do as much harm as help.
I reckon just put the whole reflector assembly on a bushing within the bucket, and servo drive it.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
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