
If my PCX gets trashed, I might try to build a shell like that. 214mpg and almost complete waterproofness sounds AWESOME!

Moderator: Modsquad
A streamlined PCX would be less efficient than that Innova, the CVT is less efficient than gearbox + chain.edscoot wrote:Apart from the great mpg there is also the benefit of covering up the pig ugly Innova.
Maybe a streamlined pcx could get 260mpg? Wouldn't be good in cross winds though.
Wrong way round, a scooter is basically a motorcycle.maddiedog wrote:The Innova is basically a scooter.
gn2 wrote:Wrong way round, a scooter is basically a motorcycle.maddiedog wrote:The Innova is basically a scooter.
gn2 wrote:Strange that Honda's Goldwing first saw the light of day with no fairing, I doubt Mr. Vetter had much to do with it coming into existence.
Strange too that in the UK and Switzerland, feet forward streamlined motorcycles weree being built in the mid 1970s years before Mr. Vetter's streamliner of 1981.
Also the low seat/low drag concept was first seen on the 1920s Ner-a-car, a production motorcycle made in Great Britain.
Some stuff to look up on Google:
Royce Creasey
Malcolm Newell
Jack DiFazio
Arnold Wagner
Quasar
Mono-tracer
Peraves
And while you're at it, look up Tommy Flowers, the British man who designed and built the worlds first programmable electronic computer.
See, I know interesting stuff as well as being a grumpy old git.
All atmosphere bound vehicles?sendler2112 wrote:I rode with Craig at the Fuel economy challenge at the Vintage Days in Ohio last July. He is doing great work but is two steps ahead of most Americans who are still hung up on style. But history will one day prove him out when he says " Someday all vehicles that go fast will be round at the front and pointy at the back".
Craig Vetter's fairings were fitted on other bikes so why didn't one of them become the icon that is the Goldwing?qed wrote:I don't think he mean't Vetter had anything to with the design of the Gold Wing, rather that his fairing designs had a lot do do with it being picked up as a tourer by the North Americans