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RevoPower

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Manufacturer
  
RevoPower Inc.

Weight
  
15 lb (6.8 kg) (dry)

Founded
  
2003

Production
  
2008–

Class
  
Motorcycle

RevoPower 2bpblogspotcomurSQl6wUA5gSRemmHY4IAAAAAAA

Engine
  
23 cc (1.4 cu in) two-stroke cycle 1.1 hp (0.8 kW) 7500 rpm (maximum)

Fuel capacity
  
1 l (0.22 imp gal; 0.26 US gal)

Assetto revopower


The RevoPower is a motorized wheel concept, the idea being the conversion of a pedal-powered bicycle into a motorcycle. It was invented by Denver, Colorado based RevoPower Inc.

Contents

The RevoPower concept is a wheel with a two-stroke engine inside it which allows the bike to which it is attached to travel up to 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) at over 100 miles per US gallon (2.4 L/100 km; 120 mpg‑imp). It is made to replace a standard 26-inch (660 mm) bicycle wheel, and to be able to run off a standard two-stroke mixture of gasoline and oil. According to the inventor, it was designed to be fuel efficient personal transportation for commuters, college students, and other specialty uses.

Revopower marketing presentation


History

Rotary engine wheel hubs have been used in motorbikes for over one hundred years.

In 1997, Steve Katsaros, the creator of the Wheel, visited a manufacturer who was experimenting with making electric powered bicycle taxis. He did not like the electric design, and began to think about how to power a bicycle with a gasoline engine, eventually deciding to keep the engine inside the wheel of the bicycle, so that it could be added or removed easily. In 2002, Katsaros filed a patent on the design, and submitted it in various contests, including one in Design News, in which he won an Excellence in Engineering Award. After news of the award was published on Slashdot, Katsaros received hundreds of emails regarding the product, including one from John Richards, who began discussing business with Katsaros. On May 16, 2003, Katsaros and Richards founded RevoPower, Inc. Its release has been postponed numerous times, having been planned variously for the second quarter of 2004, late 2005, early 2007, and being hopefully expected for early to mid-2008. As of December 2008 it has yet to be released, their official website at www.revopower.com is offline, and calls made to their Colorado office went unanswered. These circumstances, coupled with Revopower's solicitation of a $50 deposit to guarantee delivery of the first production run led to speculation that the product was never ready for the market. In any case, reimbursement checks were issued to people who had placed deposits.

Design

The wheel's design is covered by numerous patents in over 26 countries. In order to fit the entire engine inside the Wheel, it was designed using SolidWorks to deal with the technical challenges of building an engine in a bicycle's wheel. The engine is a 25 cc (1.5 cu in) two-stroke cycle design, capable of producing 1 horsepower (0.75 kW), and doing up to about 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) on level ground, while getting about 100 miles per US gallon (2.4 L/100 km; 120 mpg‑imp). The wheel conforms to California Air Resources Board and United States Environmental Protection Agency emissions regulations, with the company noting "The Wheel stops when you stop, eliminating idling". Later models are expected to include four-stroke, ethanol, and hybrid and trybrid engines.

Although the company intends the Wheel to be used by people who are not mechanically inclined, it can be installed by a dealer. The Wheel's announced initial release will fit only 26-inch (660 mm) wheel bicycles, although later models may be made in other sizes. The design of the Wheel allows the bike to which it is attached to be powered by traditional pedaling, the motor alone, or a combination of the two. As a safety feature, it shuts itself off if the rider falls off.

Delays and Speculation

Although production had been promised by the company originally for 2006, the date was pushed back to early 2008 in an interview with Popular Science. Some speculated there were technical problems with the design, and internet discussion boards show a lot of disbelief in the product due to the extended delays. As of 2009, the company's website is no longer active and the main phone line for RevoPower in Denver is not active.

References

RevoPower Wikipedia