ΗΡΧΣΦ±²₯ wins 2017 World Human-Powered Speed Challenge
ΗΡΧΣΦ±²₯ Engineeringβs Human-Powered Vehicle Design Team has won the 2017 World Human-Powered Speed Challenge.
The team's recumbent bicycle, named Eta Prime, was clocked at an impressive 127.6 kilometres per hour β the fastest in this yearβs competition.
The annual competition drew elite groups of engineers, athletes and students from around the world to a desert road outside Battle Mountain, Nev.
βIt's Burning Man for bike geeks,β ΗΡΧΣΦ±²₯'s Jun Nogami told Inside Science.
Eta Primeβs design is modelled on Eta, the vehicle that currently holds the record for the worldβs fastest bicycle at 144.17 km/h. Eta was built by AeroVelo, a company founded by ΗΡΧΣΦ±²₯ Engineering alumni Todd Reichert and Cameron Robertson.
Eta, which did not race at this yearβs competition, was the result of a long-standing collaboration between AeroVelo and the Human-Powered Vehicle Design Team (HPVDT), so it was only natural that the team built on this expertise to create their next vehicle: They used Etaβs molds to cast Eta Primeβs carbon-fibre shell.
βWithin a millimetre or two, it has exactly the same shape,β said Moes. βAs far as we know, it is the best shape for a single-person speedbike in the world.β
Still, there were aspects of Eta that Moes and his teammates felt could be improved. They overhauled the carbon-fibre frame that holds up the vehicle and redesigned both the rear wheel and braking system. Through a combination of innovations, they were able to create a bike that was 20 per cent lighter than Eta, while maintaining its internal strength.
But as with any speedbike, much depends on the engine β that is, the rider. βYou can build the best bike in the world, but if you canβt produce the energy to get it up to speed, youβre not going to get there,β said Moes.
To provide this power, many of the approximately one dozen teams in the World Human Powered Speed Challenge hire semi-professional cyclists. HPVDT does not, though Moes did undergo extensive training. Over the last eight months, he said heβs managed to reduce the gap in power output between himself and Reichert, Etaβs rider, by about half.
Calvin Moes (left) and Cameron Robertson in 2014, with a previous bike design (photo by Andrew Francis Wallace via Getty Images)
βThe fact that we reach the same speeds as the other teams, and in some cases, even surpass them, on significantly less power than their riders can produce is remarkable,β said Moes. βIt speaks to the amount of engineering that went into this design.β
Nogami, a professor in the , is the teamβs faculty adviser, and travelled with them to Battle Mountain to act as a timekeeper.
βIt is incredibly valuable for students to participate in design teams, and then to appear at international competitions,β said Nogami. βIβm proud of the way the team pushed through adversity to finish with the overall title. Congratulations to Calvin, who is the fastest person in the world for this year!β
Though the competition was intense, Moes said the atmosphere at Battle Mountain is friendly.
βThatβs actually one of the best parts of the event,β he said. βWe interface with the local community, and display our bikes to students in local schools. Teams will go and talk to each other, and inspect what new design features each bike has. Itβs wonderful to be part of this elite group of racers, and learn from experiences that we wouldnβt get anywhere else.β