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cybrbeast
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Member Since: 2006-11-10
Homepage: http://www.rainbowboys.org
Last Power Points used: 2009-11-06 • Available: 12 hours 20 minutes 28 seconds
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written by siftbot  | 4 days 9 hours 25 minutes ago | CH
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In reply to this comment by cybrbeast:
Why did the technology die with him? Surely more could be built?

>> ^cybrbeast:
Why did the technology die with him? Surely more could be built?


One person with extraordinary vision, coupled with technological know-how, engineering brilliance and the ability to get his hands dirty and plain-and-simple build what he imagines is a rare thing.

In the case of the Britten bike, this is a partial list of what made his bike special:

1) Partial girder-link front suspension with adjustable anti-dive properties.
-fork-type suspensions compress under braking and extend during acceleration, changing the geometry and handling characteristics of the machine quite drastically during the different driving modes. Britten's suspension design allowed him to control pretty much all variables of suspension geometry under changing load, making the bike behave however the rider wished.
- The rear suspension, while perhaps not as revolutionary, was a beautiful piece. It was essentially a carbon-fibre banana swing-arm with a linkage to the adjustable shock/spring assembly. If you look at the bike you'll see that there's no spring/shock assembly near the rear suspension, rather note the spring/shock assembly directly behind the front wheel- this is for the rear suspension! The front shock assembly is hidden in the front suspension linkage and cowling.

2) The engine itself was a stressed-member.
-While certainly not unheard of, Britten took the concept to an extreme, essentially eliminating the frame from the motorcycle. The front and rear suspensions essentially bolted directly to the engine, thus saving many kilos over contemporary designs. Take a look at any current MotoGP or Superbike- most use the engine as a partial stressed-member, but they all have frame members linking the engine, steering heads and seat-assemblies. Britten really only had a vestigial sub-frame for the rider's seat.

3) Well-controlled aerodynamics and fully-ducted cooling system
-Britten paid close attention to airflow over, around and through his bike. Look how cleanly the rider's body tucks into the bodywork. He paid close attention to details, notice how clean the entire assembly is- no exposed wiring, nothing dangling into the airflow, that incredibly sleek rear swing-arm and rear tire hugger. This keeps the airflow smooth and un-disturbed. Motorcycles aren't terribly aerodynamic machines in the first place, but a wise man once said God is in the details.
-The engine itself is a water cooled design, but where's the radiator? It's in a fully-sealed duct directly beneath the rider's seat. High-pressure air is inlet from the front of the bike, through the radiator and is exhausted into the low pressure area beneath the rider and above/ahead of the rear wheel. Greater cooling equals higher power potential.

4) The motor
- 999cc 60 degree V-Twin, belt-driven DOHC design, twin injectors per cylinder, sophisticated electronic ignition, hand-made carbon fibre velocity stacks, wet sump. The motor was designed to breathe hard, pumping out torque and horsepower (166 hp @ 11800 rpm- not sure about the torque figures), and run cool and reliably under racing conditions. Nothing here that any other manufacturer couldn't have figured out on their own, but Britten had the insight and the will to make the best motor in the world at the time. The 60 degree configuration was, I assume chosen for packaging reasons. Normally this configuration would have bad primary balance characteristics, but Britten engineered his to such tight tolerances that the engine ran smoothly right up to redline (12500 rpm) without using a balance shaft.
I'll also point out here that Britten wasn't above using someone else's part if it was better than he could make himself- the gearbox was from a Suzuki superbike, and the cylinder liners and voltage regulator (both of which failed at the Daytona race in '92- the latter costing Britten the win) were from Ducati.

5) Carbon Fibre
- While Carbon Fibre had been around for 2 decades or so at this point, nobody had used it so extensively. Britten used the material for bodywork, wheels, engine parts, suspension girders and the rear swing-arm. There is still no other bike, not even the current Ducati Desmosedici MotoGP bike, that uses so much of this exotic material. The stuff then, as it is now, was hugely expensive and challenging to engineer for different applications. Britten made everything himself, in his garage, figuring it out as he went. This kept the total weight of the bike to a hugely impressive 138 kg.

Keep in mind that he did all of the above in 1991 and 1992, with the help of several neighbors and one part-time machinist, in his backyard shed! He made the bodywork by hand, using a wire frame and hot melt glue, crafting the wind-cheating shape and cooling ducting purely by eye. He cast the aluminum engine parts himself, heat-treating them in his wife's pottery kiln, and cooling the heat-treated parts with water from his swimming pool!

Ducati, Honda, Kawasaki, Suzuki... any one of these manufactures could today reproduce and expand on what Britten accomplished almost single-handedly. None of them will- there's too much at stake for them. It's far safer to stick with the tried-and-true, making small evolutionary changes over the years. A true visionary achiever (to coin a term) like Britten comes along only every once in a great while.

I suppose that this is what was really lost when John Britten died... vision, engineering acuity, hands-on knowledge, and pure will. Touched with a little craziness.


written by therealblankman  | 5 days 21 hours 11 minutes ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 1 week ago | CH
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Successfully processed your "amazon" invocation - view all Amazonized posts here


written by siftbot  | 1 week ago | CH
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Appreciate the promote, nicely remembered


written by Crake  | 1 week 1 day ago | CH
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How do you do amazon invocations?


written by oxdottir  | 1 week 4 days ago | CH
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Thank you!

In reply to this comment by cybrbeast:
Most human-like walking achieved by a robot thus far, *promote


written by oxdottir  | 1 week 4 days ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 2 weeks 2 days ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 2 weeks 2 days ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 2 weeks 5 days ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 2 weeks 6 days ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 3 weeks 2 days ago | CH
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Condolences on your neck injury, i hope it heals soon. Being unable to look from left to right must be a severe hinderence when crossing the street

In reply to this comment by cybrbeast:
Wouldn't 180 degrees be enough for his gay party?


written by dannym3141  | 3 weeks 4 days ago | CH
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It works now.

It's simply foolish the way they've done it, but I suppose we'll just have to use a proxy to sift South Park.

In reply to this comment by cybrbeast:
If found the international embed via a proxy server. Could you check if it works?

In reply to this comment by gwiz665:
When you embed from .nl it's *blocked for me. Get the .com embed, that's open to everyone, if you can get the embed code.



written by gwiz665  | 3 weeks 5 days ago | CH
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Your video, South Park - Chipotle Away, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.


written by siftbot  | 4 weeks ago | CH
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Successfully processed your "amazon" invocation - view all Amazonized posts here


written by siftbot  | 4 weeks 1 day ago | CH
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Successfully processed your "amazon" invocation - view all Amazonized posts here


written by siftbot  | 4 weeks 1 day ago | CH
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written by siftbot  | 4 weeks 1 day ago | CH
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Thanks. And here comes your promote.

In reply to this comment by cybrbeast:
Better quality embed:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97CRwd_U2FU



written by silvercord  | 1 month ago | CH
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