Drill-powered Tricycle Goodness!

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Drill-powered Tricycle Goodness!

If only I had a machine shopโ€ฆ and a couple of monthsโ€ฆ and some access to fancy overrunning clutch gearwheels and a design shopโ€ฆ andโ€ฆ actually, this design might just need to go commercial, though perhaps with a bit more of a comfortable ride. With the EX tricycle, the driver is forward-facing, belly-down and drives the vehicle by actuating hand and brake triggers, the former of which control the twin 18V drill/drivers that power this beast of a machine (they used Bosch, but the system is fairly universal). With arms spread wide and torso somewhat elevated (OK, contorted) from the frame, the machine can be drivenโ€ฆ at speeds approaching 19 mph. The entire vehicle was built from scratch and modeled on the human body โ€“ a fact that is evident when you see the very spine-like exoskeleton that requires you to use your whole body to steer.

What I liked best was the engineering. Like the design or not, a lot ofย thought went into the EX โ€“ especially with respect to the chain-basedย drive train. The twin drills are connected on opposite sides so thatย they run in the same direction. Itโ€™s kind of low-tech until you look atย the use of overrunning clutch gearwheels which send torque to theย wheels and keep the drills from interfering with each other.

Drill-powered Tricycle -1

Seriously, itโ€™s cool-looking, but it makes the average crotch-rocket look like a well-padded cruiser. I mean, itโ€™s different โ€“ but would anyone actually want to drive it for more than 10 minutes at a shot (or even last that long?) Maybe thatโ€™s not the point (thatโ€™s code for โ€œYes, Iโ€™d take one if you gave it to me!โ€) Brilliant and simpleโ€ฆ just put a seat on it for goodness sake!

Drill-powered Tricycle -2
Yeahโ€ฆ thatโ€™s uncomfortable.

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