Re: What I'd love to see in MAB competitions
Have you noted the price of diesel lately......what's the point?
I rarely pedal assist my motorised bikes........blew out my left ACL racing scooters, that's why I put engines on them now. My bikes definitely get better gas milage than any 4,6 or 8 cylinder car.....I'm good with that.
Well, I think you're asking two things. The point of adding fuel efficacy scoring to a rally or race for MABs is the fact that
do have pedals. Seems a natural. It adds a component that tests man
and machine. That it would not be for everyone is a given. If someone has an injury or other reasons they don't want to compete, well to each their own. But it could be another class of event that is an alternative to the free-for-all of who wants to throw the most money and hang the biggest engine off a bicycle. It puts emphasis back into the mix on the well tuned bicycle, lightweight and rewards fitness.
In another venue, long rider Wiley Davis has proposed a challenge and is currently building a bike for it. This is his outline.
An off-road, self-supported Baja challenge.
* Tecate to La Paz (along a pre-defined mostly off-road route).
* 5 gallons of fuel, no refills.
* Raced for time.
* Open challenge meaning you could attempt the route whenever you want, but you'd be tracked via something like a Spot GPS tracker.
To my mind, MAB distance racing should be all about a restricted fuel amount. That will encourage the beneficial use of motor-assisted pedaling.
Definitely one for the hale and hardy. The link upthread to the Craig Vetter site offers outlines for some easier fuel efficiency motorcycle events that could be easily adapted to MABs. I think it would be fun and an ancillary benefit might be to highlight to the public what MABs are really good at.
As to the diesels, I don't know if you read the short article at the link, but the author's point was that they are leading a resurgence in interest in FIA events. At Le Mans and Sebring endurance races, the front runners are using them and winning because of increased fuel efficiency. The tech guys at Peugeot, Audi and Toyota et al are combining performance, reliability and efficiency to squeeze more miles out of them and having to refuel less often.