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To: spycatcher
1) The length of the Segue (sp)? is only the length of the diameter of the wheels?

2) I figured you would catch my error in my over simplification. If the balance wheel's rake is perpendicular to the ground, unless the wheel is turned in the direction you're rotating, it will just drag, however, if you introduce a bit of rake (think chopper) then the wheel will pivot on its own in the correct direction. On a car it's called caster and is the reason your steering wheel returns to the center when you make a turn, providing the alignment is correct.

3) This monstrous "appendage" can be replaced with something you probably use every week, a castor. Best known as the wobbling front wheels of a shopping cart. What are they, maybe an inch longer than the diameter of the wheel itself?

4) Before you mention it, if you only used one caster and you leaned into the direction opposite the castor, you'd fall over so you put one on the front and one on the back and hopefully make them of better quality materials than the ones on the shopping carts I always seem to always pick.

5) The ability to turn in its own radius is worth $3000?

6) I'm not knocking the impressive technology but it seems a waste for what is in essence a scooter, albeit one you stand up on.

127 posted on 12/03/2001 9:18:01 PM PST by Lx
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To: Lx; Squantos
Send me a prototype :) It's meant more to be a compact extension of your own body and mind -- with no accelerator or brakes. And taking up zero space around you, just big enough for feet. Sort of a base for a future exoskeleton.

It's not perfect, but neither was the Wright Bros plane, or the first bike with a motor on it. This is much more advanced and now other companies will try to copy and improve on the design. Future versions from DEKA will probably have sterling engines for added power and range

130 posted on 12/03/2001 9:44:06 PM PST by spycatcher
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To: Lx
From what I've read, having two wheels is part of it's ability to operate on so little power, since the rider is in essense in a controlled fall as he moves forward or backward. Adding a third wheel would take away the system's ability to function in this fashion.

All in all, an interesting invention. We'll see if it lives up to the hype.

150 posted on 12/03/2001 11:11:39 PM PST by bootyist-monk
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