Posted on 12/21/2001 7:40:14 AM PST by IowaHawk
Here we go again. Yet another mechanical miracle guaranteed to break the American love affair with the automobile. Following limited success via mass-transit buses and light rail, bicycles, jogging shoes and assorted urban people-movers, we now have the Segway HT as the latest antidote to shatter our century-old habit of relying on the ol flivver in the garage for routine travel.
In case youve missed the rhapsodized coverage of the Segway HT by the elite media which never misses a chance to remind us that our automobiles are our greatest enemy the Segway HT (Human Transport) also known as Ginger is a gadget that can turn a couch potato into an Olympic sprinter with the twist of the wrist. Hey, was that Donovan Bailey crossing the intersection? Naw; Rosie ODonnell on the way to the studio.
Consider that the Segway HT, which looks like your neighbors power mower without the blade and the bag, will haul a normal-sized biped at speeds up to 12.5 mph, which is roughly three times the velocity attained in normal walking. An impressive pace, which can be maintained for up to 17 miles before re-charging the battery.
Its presumably operable by anybody smart enough to grip the handlebars. Lean forward and it moves ahead. The more you lean, the faster you go. Same for reverse. A twist of the hand and the Segway will turn on a dime. It will not tip over. Its all in the gyroscopes and tilt sensors that make up what its creators call Dynamic stabilization.
Dean Kamen, the inventor and leader of the Segway design team headquartered in environmentally aware Manchester, NH, is one bright guy. He holds over 150 patents in the fields of medical devices, climate control systems and helicopter technology. This is his first crack at ground-based transportation, based on the conventional wisdom that the automobile is a lousy people hauler in urban situations where 80% of the worlds population hangs out.
So Kamen, backed by big investors Credit Suisse and First Boston and aligned with industrial giants like Delphi Automotive, IBM, GE Plastics, Michelin, etc. set out to create a device that wont make the car smaller, but the pedestrian larger at least in the context of mobility.
Kamen & Co. reckon that every day Americans drive 1.35 billion miles on trips of five miles or less. If only 10% of those miles were traveled with Segway HTs, maybe 6.2 million gallons of gasoline or 2.6 billion gallons per year would be saved. And of course the environment, air quality, urban space, etc. would also benefit.
Great idea. On the computer screen. Imagine hundreds of thousands of citizens zipping along the sidewalks of Americas major cities on spindly little Segways. A beautiful vision, right? Now think of Beijing or New Delhi, where insect-like swarms of bicycles sluice along the major thoroughfares. Think about the last time you dodged a kid blazing down a big city sidewalk on a 10-speed. Think about the center cities of Athens, Rome and a hundred other European towns where automobiles have been supplanted by screeching mobs of motor scooters. Filthy, noisy, crude little beasts compared to the Segway HT, but similar in theme and mission. And dont think about one-handing a Segway while clutching an umbrella in Seattle or Portland or donning a snowmobile suite for winter travel in Chicago or Boston. And dont think about the added strain on the already-over loaded electrical power grid when millions of Segways plug in for a re-charge every day. (Remember, at the end of every electric-powered-vehicle fantasy stands a smokestack.)
The Segway HT is a thoroughly ingenious device. But so was the General Motors EV1 electric car that turned out to be a hopeless failure. Short range, low power and absurd battery recharging cycles killed it. The Segway may have terrific potential for postal delivery, warehouse mobility, law enforcement, theme park touring, etc. and a bright future in developing countries, although supplanting the lighter, cheaper bicycle and the faster motor scooter may be difficult, especially at a proposed cost of about $3000.00.
The technical brilliance of a concept does not assure success. Example: The Honda Insight hybrid will get over 50 miles per gallon in city driving with ease. It is tiny, quick and nimble. It is the cleanest mass-produced vehicle on earth. Environmentalists celebrated it as a breakout automobile. The media was charmed by it. It is a relatively cheap (about $20,000), reliable, weatherproof, comfortable commuter vehicle. It will run 100 mph on the highway and still get over 40 mpg. It will carry two passengers rather than one. It is the best urban automobile available along with its larger, slower four-seat rival, the Toyota Prius. Yet the Insight, for all its environmental wonderment, has sold only 4,000 units in America this year. But Honda planned on moving 6500 of the little beauties, meaning that on-paper enthusiasm for this environmentally friendly vehicle far surpasses its marketplace appeal.
Were I a member of Mr. Kamens talented team, I would be advising him to take a very hard look at the Honda experience before I geared up for really big production.
Point well taken. My first computer (bought in 1990 for $700 on sale) had no hard drive, 64K of RAM and ran at about 8 mhz. No Internet; you connected to local bulletin boards. There was Compuserve, but at $12.50/hour, it was a damn expensive chat.
Nerdness coming out here: As heard from the man who claimed to be "turned into a newt" in Monty Python and the Holy Grail...
"It got better."
Automobiles were something between a joke and a rich man's fad for their first 15 years. Those got better, too.
My point is, that while Kamen maybe has invented nothing worthwhile here, maybe he has. It's too early to tell.
"640K ought to be enough for anybody"
Bill Gates actually said that in the early days.
It usually helps if you're wearing a beret, smoking a Galois, and swilling cheap wine.
Vehicles and their estimated Hot Chick Attraction Factors:
Segway scooter: 0.4 (4.8 at TrekCon)
'74 Custom Astrovan w/ murals, bubble portholes, waterbed & shag carpet: 1.3
'86 Mazda GLC with 'Dominos Pizza' sign: 1.9
'91 Honda Civic with ground effects, spoiler and 4" exhaust tip from Pep Boys: 2.6
'86 Chevy 4x4 mudder with peeing Calvin sticker and rifle rack: 3.3
1971 Buick Electra 225 Superfly Pimpmobile: 3.7
Cadillac Escalade w/ 21 inch Gangsta rims: 5.3
Deuce roadster: 6.3
Jesse James Coast Chopper: 6.8
Jag X-8 7.5
Ferrari 360 Modena: 9.6
Gulfstream V: 29.8
In all honesty, I think the biggest obstacle to consumer acceptance for the current design, even for early technology adopters that will but anything new, is theft. That's an expensive little toy to leave out on the street even if it won't operate without the "key"
Cheers!
For instance, Vespas are handy if you're seeking a slightly insane, Sylvia Plath-type beatnik poetry chick. Jacked-up 4x4 are a good lure for rural Missouri trailer honeys. Lap dancers at Scores go for them NFL-gangsta rim Escalades.
I think the Segway might be a powerful afrodesiac for all those hot chicks in the Dungeons & Dragons club.
That's the universal "you," not the 'Hawk "you."
Make sure you make a bad impression on her friends--it guarantees first date sex because there ain't gonna be a second one.
Very useful for attracting the middle-aged harridan J.A.P. Cell Phone Soccer Mom of your dreams.
Personally I see it as a golf cart alternative.
This is more an urban very short distance vehicle.
Of course if you own a theme park to you really want
these two wheel wonders ziping all over the place?
Finally note: any vehicle which is individual based
and not mass transit is good.
That doesn't square with their hype about "redesigning cities" around it.
The inventors are interested in profit.
Probably so. However, in its current form I can't see it supplanting its primary competitor, the bicycle.
We all know this thing will BE a Riviera in know time.
Soon will come the airbag, seatbelts, AM/FM/8-track/Cassette/CD-changer-DVD player, cell-phone mic/speakers/dc-adaptor, power-lumbar, etc accessories and before you know it, you're checkin' the color charts to try and make your "Segway-Riviera" look different than your neighbors.
Besides with a bicycle I have to stradle and peddle.
With the segway I stand and lean.
On a real personal level, I wish I could invest in the
company.
The miserable man has a Jewish girlfriend, an Italian accountant, a German cook and a French bodyguard.
The happy man has a French girlfriend, a Jewish accountant, an Italian cook and a German car.
The miserable man has a Jewish girlfriend, an Italian accountant, a German cook and a French car.
People have been saying that since the 19th century and the only promising vehicle today is a refined Edison battery, instead of Edison's nickle/iron plates and grids we now have the nickle-metal hydride (iron and nickle) cells that are expensive, heavy and have low energy-density.
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