Can Gyroscopes Revolutionize Motorcycle Balance?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the potential application of gyroscopes for enhancing the balance of motorcycles, inspired by a video of a self-balancing two-wheeled vehicle. Participants explore the mechanics of gyroscopes, their effectiveness, and the implications of using them in motorcycle design.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question whether gyroscopes spinning in opposite directions can effectively maintain balance, suggesting that they may cancel each other out and create unnecessary stress on their axle.
  • There is a discussion about the relationship between the mass of the spinning gyroscope and the force it generates, with some suggesting that a heavier mass could complicate balance efforts.
  • One participant describes how motorcycle steering geometry, particularly the concept of trail, helps maintain vertical orientation at certain speeds, and how gyroscopic effects can influence this balance.
  • Another participant mentions that at high speeds, gyroscopic reactions may dominate, leading to a loss of self-stability, which they refer to as "capsize mode." They note that rider input becomes crucial in these situations.
  • Some participants propose the idea of using a spinning inner mass within a stationary wheel to maintain balance, questioning its feasibility.
  • There is mention of powered gimbal assemblies that could potentially stabilize a motorcycle using gyroscopes, indicating a more complex mechanism than simple gyroscopic action.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the effectiveness of gyroscopes for motorcycle balance, with no consensus reached on their practicality or design implications. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the best approach to integrating gyroscopic technology into motorcycles.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight various assumptions about gyroscopic mechanics, the influence of mass and speed on balance, and the complexity of motorcycle dynamics, indicating that further exploration is needed to clarify these points.

Mikesaa309
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Hi,

I saw a video online of a self balancing 2 wheeled car. Basically a motorcycle with a body though has a steering wheel rather than handle bars. It uses two gyroscopes spinning in opposite directions to keep it's balance and was wondering if a similar thing could be adapted for regular motorcycles out of curiosity.

I have researched on how gyroscopes work but I was wondering does the mass of the spinning disc/wheel effect how much force is being created? So assuming it is, would you need a heavy spinning mass to keep a motorcycle upright?

Also a motorcycle or a even just a wheel can keep it's self upright if spinning fast enough same with a coin if you roll it then it remains upright. I then thought would the same effect happen if the wheel it's self was stationary but a inner cylindrical mass was spinning inside of it would it keep the wheel upright? If that's the case then would making a motorcycle wheel with a spinning inner mass in the wheel keep the bike upright?
 
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Mikesaa309 said:
Hi,

I saw a video online of a self balancing 2 wheeled car. Basically a motorcycle with a body though has a steering wheel rather than handle bars. It uses two gyroscopes spinning in opposite directions to keep it's balance and was wondering if a similar thing could be adapted for regular motorcycles out of curiosity
The video sounds like hokum. Two gyroscopes spinning in opposite directions cancel each other out. They put stress on their axle and accomplish nothing.

Edit: That's if the gyroscope wheels are on a common axle. The mechanism in the video might not do something quite that stupid.

I have researched on how gyroscopes work but I was wondering does the mass of the spinning disc/wheel effect how much force is being created? So assuming it is, would you need a heavy spinning mass to keep a motorcycle upright?
The larger the mass, the more torque (or the more duration for a fixed torque) you can get out of a given amount of precession. If you are trying to keep a motorcycle upright, making the gyroscope heavy hurts as well as helps. Now you not only have to keep the motorcycle upright. You have to keep the gyroscope upright as well.

The added value seems questionable. Motorcycles work fine without gyroscopes. And gyroscopes are not magic. Exert a constant torque on them in a fixed direction and they eventually run out of ability to resist -- they precess until their axis is lined up with the applied torque.
 
Mikesaa309 said:
a coin if you roll it then it remains upright.
If the coin is angled sideways enough when released it will not straighten up, but roll in a spiral like pattern as it slows down, assuming there's enough friction on the floor to keep it from sliding out.

The steering geometry on a bike tends to keep a bike vertically oriented within a range of speeds. The common type of steering geometry is called trail, where the contact patch is behind where the steering pivot axis intercepts the pavement. If the bike is leaning, then without any rider input, the trail causes the front tire to steer inwards in reaction to the lean, enough to correct the bike back to vertical (within a range of speed). Another method used for an experiment uses a weight above and ahead of the front wheel, which doesn't have any caster or trail, and when this bike leans, a yaw torque due to the weight causes the front tire to steer inwards.

Gyroscopic reaction causes the front wheel to steer in the direction of roll torque, but once the turn is coordinated, the roll torque goes to zero, so the gyroscopic effect tends to hold a coordinated turn instead of correcting the bike back a vertical orientation. At most speeds, the rate of precession while a bike leans over is slow enough that the net effect is that it slows down the geometry related steering reaction. When the geometry related steering is inwards enough to produce an outwards roll torque needed to correct the lean back to vertical, the geometry related steering reaction is trying to steer outwards of the current steering angle. The net effect is that gyroscopic reaction opposes the geometry based reaction, but within a speed range, the geometry based reaction dominates and the gryoscopic reaction acts as a damper, just slowing down the correction as opposed to preventing it.

At high speeds, gyroscopic reaction dominates, and self stability is lost (called capsize mode). The bike falls inwards at a very slow rate, and the rate may be so slow that's it's imperceptible to the rider, and the bike appears to hold the current lean angle until the rider uses counter steering to return to vertical orientation. Body leaning which indirectly countersteers a bike, ceases to work at high speeds, and only direct counter steering by the rider works.
 
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Mikesaa309 said:
So assuming it is, would you need a heavy spinning mass to keep a motorcycle upright?
Or a smaller mass spinning faster.
 
Mikesaa309 said:
It uses two gyroscopes spinning in opposite directions to keep it's balance and was wondering if a similar thing could be adapted for regular motorcycles out of curiosity.
The gyroscopes are not self-stable devices. Instead they are mounted in powered gimbal assemblies (and a motor within the gimbal assemblies to keep the gryo's spinning). Looking at the image, the gyro's have a near vertical (yaw) axis. The gimbal assembly motors exert a torque (as needed) about a left right (pitch) axis, resulting in a reaction torque (as needed) about the roll axis, which is used to stabilize the bike.
 
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The title of this thread strikes me as a real oxymoron.
"Clarification"? That's something I would love to see.:wink::wink:
 

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