Small wheels, road abnormalities, and crowded pedestrian thoroughfares
Bartholomew said:
Why would small wheels make endoing a problem?
The people who have cracked their heads open on Bike Fidays (20"-wheel folding bicycle built in Eugene, Oregon) report that the small front wheel seems to not clear road abnormalities very well.
this machine would be intended to be used on fairly flat surfaces--hallways
Anything other than walking does not work in hallways. Try running daily down crowded hallways. After you knock the books out of Macho-Man's girlfiend's arms, you might be sorry you put your theory to the test.
I think that ordinary foldable bicycles commonly weigh 40 or 50+ pounds.
Many folding bicycles are ordinary bicycles that have merely the addition of two of these:
http://www.sandsmachine.com
Two of these torque couplings together only weigh 8 oz. If a normal bike weighs 15-30 lbs., why would a folding bike weigh 40-50 lbs.?
Bike Friday's small-wheel folding bikes weigh 16-26 lbs.
http://www.bikefriday.com
Anyway even if you used titanium to make a 20 lb conventional folding bicycle
Titanium does not make a bike significantly lighter.
http://www.henryjames.com/faq.html
Most steel-frame folding road bikes weigh ~20 lbs.
I'm thinking that a rushed businessperson might use it to cut 5-10 minutes off his daily routine.
They might consider hiring taxicabs and pedicabs. That way they can talk on the phone and organize their files while en route.
there are one or two streamlined bicycles that can do 80 mph on a flat stretch.
Full-fairing recumbents have practicality problems. One problem is that the engine of the vehicle loses all of its cooling potential when the fairing is on. If you read the human land-speed record pages carefully, you will see that some of the hazards of those record attempts include overheating.
I doubt a pair of pogo sticks ("kangaroo legs") would compete.
The ones that have been made and linked-to on Slashdot are referred to IIRC as spring-loaded exoskeletal devices. The ones I saw on the inventors web page were pretty big and heavy, so some design and materials advances might be in order before they could be marketed to the downtown crowd.
I think roller skates are a practical option.
They have small wheels, and so they have the tripping problem. They might also need hand-controlled brakes (remote brake levers in the hands). Wheel abrasion might be excessive, requiring frequent wheel replacement.
How fast does an average person who isn't going too fast go on roller skates?
I would assume lollygagging skaters go a bit slower than lollygagging bicyclists -- so, say, around 8 to 15 MPH.