Thursday, May 31, 2007

Lightning Lithium

(click on image to enlarge)

The LA Times had two articles on electric bicycles on Wednesday(5/30/2007) in the "Highway" section.

Watch the accompanying video . In the video, the guy say "burn rubber not gasoline" is what Michael "Hollywood" Raines said in his show "The Shop" about the electric bicycle he built. see promo video

One of the LA Times articles was titled: "Plug into the Future". And the other was titled: "Solar power to juice the motor bike? Panel up"

The stories are based around a motorcycle retrofitting company based in Oakland named "Lightning Motors", or "Electric Motorsports". And although the author hinted at past ventures into the realm of electric motorcycles, they did not include some of the hybrid electric biofuel models.

After taking a closer look at the motorcycle (see picture to the right, the bike "Lithium Lightning" has a significant dangerous component. The batteries are being packed to low to the ground. If the motorcycle goes over a pothole and the front fork suspension springs down, could put the battery pack jamming into the ground. This could cause serious damage to the batteries and more importantly could cause the bike to lose control, endangering the riders.

Solar power to juice the motor bike? Panel up
By Susan Carpenter, Times Staff Writer
May 30, 2007

I'D been riding for years before I learned motorcycles' dirty little secret. Mile per mile, some bikes actually spew more gunk into the air than cars, pickup trucks or SUVs, even if they do use less gas. It was a sickening realization, since I'd spent so much time believing the opposite was true.

That's why the prospect of a performance-oriented electric bike is so appealing.
Of course, an electric motorcycle isn't the same as a zero-emissions motorcycle. An electric bike's environmental friendliness depends, for the most part, on where it's plugged in: What's the energy source that's powering the outlet?

Most of the electricity in this country is supplied by coal-fueled plants, so if you're plugging an electric bike into your outlet, you could say your bike is basically coal-powered. It's using less energy, and therefore polluting less than a gas-powered bike, but it's still using a fossil fuel and it isn't zero-emission.

The idea behind the Lightning Motors is to make a bike that's electric and zero-emission, courtesy of solar power.

Most Americans don't live "off the grid," and installing solar panels isn't cheap. Add the cost of a solar power installation to the price of a motorcycle, and it starts to get a little outrageous. But that's short-term thinking. In the long term, it might make a lot of sense.

Say you're a commuter, riding a real Yamaha R1 about 80 miles round trip each day. You're probably putting $8 worth of gas in your tank daily. That means you're shelling out about $2,000 a year for gas.

By solar expert Richard Hatfield's math, you're a quarter of the way toward the cost of a solar-panel installation that would support regular charging of a bike like his R1 conversion, which uses about 8 kilowatts of power to travel 80 miles at an average speed of 65 mph. Creating 8 kilowatts using solar power would require a 1.2-kilowatt setup, Hatfield says. That's a solar panel roughly the size of two sheets of plywood with an installation cost of about $8,000.

The batteries for the Lightning Lithium we tested (see accompanying article) are rated for 3,000 charges. For a daily commuter, that translates into about 10 years of life. With Hatfield's solar power scenario, that means the last six years of the batteries' life are basically free.

At least, that's the theory. These batteries are so new that they haven't been tested in the real world to verify the math, but as gas heads toward $4 a gallon, it's an interesting idea to ponder.
and:
Plug into the future
A lithium-battery proto conversion shows how an electric bike can go faster than a golf cart and have the range to be practical.
SUSAN CARPENTER
May 30, 2007

Oakland — IT'S "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," motorcycle style.

Lightning Motors' lithium-powered superbike looks like an R1. It even handles like the Yamaha liter bike. But its innards have been wrenched and yanked out.

The entire engine is missing. So are the tailpipes, radiator, gas cap, transmission and clutch. In their place: a wall of yellow batteries, an AC regenerative motor, an electric throttle and a three-pronged plug, which pokes out from the frame and connects to a standard outlet.


Welcome to the world of electric motorcycle conversions — a micro-phenom that's been percolating for at least the last decade, primarily at independent motorcycle shops, like the one I visited in Oakland. Less polluting and less expensive to operate than their gas-powered brethren, electric bikes seem like a great idea. But until recently they've had an Achilles' heel: the large size and low power-to-weight ratio of the lead-acid batteries propelling them.

Using lead-acid, builders have had to choose between the tortoise and the hare. Sure, they could hot-rod an electric bike to go 100 mph, but it would go only a few miles, making it useless for anything but drag racing. To get even 25 miles of life from a charge, most builders have opted for a small-displacement chassis and restricted the power output to a wimpy 50-ish mph, which is why electric bikes have a reputation for being as slow as golf carts.

Enter lithium. Specifically, lithium iron phosphate. One of several forms of lithium on the battery market, these LiFePO4, or LiFe, batteries, as they're called, have only recently become affordable for the average Joe. They're still four times as expensive as lead acid, but they weigh half as much, last 10 times as long and let a bike travel three times as far on a single charge.

Unlike the Tesla electric sport car, which is powered by thousands of tiny batteries, the R1 conversion uses just 28. Each of them is 90 amp-hours at 3.2 volts and 6.6 pounds. Together, they weigh less than everything that was taken off the bike to make it electric. While the majority of the batteries are concentrated in a Mondrian-esque block where the engine used to be, they're also tucked under the seat where the exhaust was once located, to mimic the weight distribution of a stock R1.

That's where the similarities begin to blur and separate. Turning on the bike, there's no sound — a potential safety issue. Riding it, the only noise I heard was the spinning of the chain and my own amazed laughter. When I rolled on the throttle, torque peaked instantly and stayed there. There was no need to shift because it's a one-speed; there wasn't any clutch. The digital dash included amp, volt and battery discharge information, in addition to the usual tach and speedo.

The bike's potential horsepower is 70. Top speed: 100 mph, though I was counseled against going too fast because:

1. The bike had only recently been built and didn't have its papers in order.
2. I was riding in a heavily policed part of Oakland.
3. The only thing stopping the batteries from sliding into the front wheel was a makeshift strap.

If only I'd visited one day later. That's when the bike's builders planned on installing the battery mounts. As it was, after just a few minutes of riding, I squeezed the brakes and 120 pounds of batteries bum-rushed the front fender, locking up my front end as I rolled toward a stop sign.

The Lightning Lithium is, after all, just a prototype — an idealistic vision of what could be. Using a track-beaten 1999 Yamaha R1, the conversion cost about $15,000 total. It was the brainchild of Richard Hatfield, a motorcycle enthusiast and solar panel importer based in Burlingame, and Todd Kollin, who's been making electric bikes out of past-their-prime gas-powered ones for the last six years at his Oakland shop, Electric Motorsport. Right now, the shop does custom conversions of aging internal-combustion bikes, with a turnaround time of about 30 days.

Within a couple years, the two hope to make a comparably priced production version of the bike using a custom chassis, as well as a smaller, less powerful $6,000 to $8,000 model.

They won't be the first to try it. In recent years, various electric-motorcycle manufacturers have unveiled exotic and promising prototypes with faraway launch dates, but they never seem to materialize for sale. As gas prices spiral upward and lithium prices continue to fall, Hatfield and Kollin aren't likely to be the last.

Lightning Motors' 1999 Yamaha R1 electric conversion

Price: $15,000
Powertrain: AC regenerative motor powered by lithium iron phosphate batteries, 550-amp system, one speed
Maximum torque: 80 pound-feet
Maximum rpm: 8,000
Potential horsepower: 70
Estimated range: 80 miles at 65 mph
Dry weight: About 400 pounds
Charge time: Seven hours with on-board charger that plugs into a standard outlet

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Magical Bus

interestingly, "The Beatles" produced a film.. a pseudo documentary... of a bus ride (tour) in England, titled "The Magical Mystery Tour"(see: wiki). And that another pop music star in the 1960's, "The Doors", also wrote a song the revolved around a bus ride, (The Big Blue Bus #10), titled "The End".

The Beatles also produced an album by the name "Magical Mystery Tour" and a song by the same name.

There were other icons in the 1960's that had affinity for buses, and using them for their modes of transportation, perhaps in a less public transit fashion, such as The Merry Pranksters and their Acid Test bus tours throughout California in the same era.

There was another tour bus, based in California, that was hatched in the 1960's called The Green Tortoise that provided shuttle bus rides from San Francisco to Los Angeles, which continued to offer this commuter bus ride up through at least a few years ago.

BTW, there is a special Big Blue Bus operator that has a style of service that can make riding the Big Blue Bus a magical ride. And if you have happenned to ride with this operator, I think you will know what I mean. And I believe that it may leave you with a fond memory. This operator is often found operating the Big Blue Bus #10, which takes people from downtown Santa Monica, on the #10 freeway, to Union Station in downtown Los Angeles.

Perhaps those 60's revolutionaries of thought were presenting alternatives forms of transportation, even it perhaps encrypted in some ways.

You can watch the film "Magical Mystery Tour" (51 minutes), on Google Video below.

Monday, May 28, 2007

E-bikes Canada

This is a video news report from province of Ontario Canada, from 2006. It was a follow up report on the change in the law there which allows e-bikes to use the roads just like other bicycles. The law appears similar to the the California law CVC 24016 and CVC 406b (see: Electric Bicycle Laws wiki)



Representative of the "Electric Vehicle Council" of Ottawa by the "Ottawa Citizen Citydesk" tv show (also see; Ottawacitizen.com).

Related Posts:
- "Man Motors on Hybrid (electric) Bike"(Video News report)
- Electric Bicycle Commuter Tips(video)
- Hybrid Bike in Valley news report
- How to Install an Electric Hub Motor Kit on a Bicycle video
- Electric Bikes China news report
- Ebikes Public Parking/Charging Stations
- Touring Beijing by Electric Bicycle
- Ebikes Vietnam video news report
- Electric Bikes Vancouver video news report
- CarLess Santa Monica video news report
- Vanguard Bikes (electric assist bicycles)
- G-Wiz Electric Car news report

Recommended Links:
- Cycle Santa Monica community forum

Friday, May 25, 2007

Unmanned Bicycle

This unmanned (or womaned) robot bicycle raises some many questions and thoughts.(see video below)

It appears that it is an electric bicycle that has a gyroscope to help it keep balance and a computer to give it control of where it goes, how fast, and how to turn, and when.

It might be alot of fun to have one of these at a critical mass bicycle ride. It may freak lots of folks out. Or it might be interesting to have it present riding during a "Ride of Silence". Ot it may be freaky to have it finish up an AIDS California ride as the bicycle being ridden by the spirit of those who have died.

Other thoughts... what is the legality of a robotic bicycle riding on the street or on sidewalks?

It may be kind of nice to have a bicycle like this that you can be kind of like "Kit" in that TV series that you can call to pick you up where you are.

I bike like that may be interesting as a theft deterent in that it will ride home if it gets stolen.

Any more thoughts?


Video description:

A robot bike which is developed to deliver noodles. It keeps balance with a gyro sensor and is equipped with landing gears for a stop.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Joy of Biking

The Peak Oil folks at APPLE put out a new video panel discussion on "The Joy of Bicycling". It has some interesting info. The people the host interviewed were from the "Alliance of People Powered Transportation"(Nevada County, California).

The Panelists are Janelle Black, Nicholas George, Johnna Gorrido. The host is Janaia Donaldson (Alliance For Post Petroleum Local Economy - APPLE).

One of the interesting things discussed was the bicycle, bike trailer, and ExtraCycle rental program offered through the Alliance for Human Powered Transportation. It would be great to have a resource like that.



Video Description:

Peak Moment 17: Members of Nevada County's Alliance for People-Powered Transportation discuss biking as a viable alternative to cars; safety, time-saving perspectives, strategies for getting started, and being equipped.


Recommended Links:
- Alliance for Post Petroleum Local Economy
- Alliance for Human Powered Transportation
- APPLE yahoogroup\
- Cycle Santa Monica! community forum
- Santa-Monica/West-L.A./Venice critical mass community forum

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

BugE

A guy in Oregon created a 3 wheeled electric, lite, electric vehicle, he calls "BugE".

Here a couple videos of it in action:


Video Description:

First test run of BugE Personal Electric Vehicle February 2007 Creswell Oregon USA


Video Description:
Mark Murphy, designer, in his new kit vehicle creation, the BugE


It appears to be chain driven, rear wheel drive. It appears there may, or may not, be suspension of any of the wheels. the shell canopy appears similar to the Go-One velomobile and others.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Dana+Bicycles

(click on images to enlarge.)

In 1970, Dana (AKA Rosemary Brown) was the first person from the Republic of Ireland to win the Eurovision.

In a news film clip, see below, from that year, she was seen riding her bicycle in the city. And, interestingly, in the Eurovision competition, it appears she was wearing a dress with a colorful graphic image of a bicycle on the front of her dress.

The bicycle she was riding appears to be a folding bicycle and may have been taken in Derry Ireland. If anyone has more info or other thoughts on that let me know.



To learn more about Dana, see:
- Dana Rosemary (TV.com)
- Dana (IMDB)
- Dana Rosemary Scanlion(wiki)
- Rosemary Brown(wiki)

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Vanguard Bicycle

As it so happens, I ran into the owner of "Vanguard Bicycles" in downtown Santa Monica and got a chance to see his hybrid bicycle up close. In our interesting discussion about electric bicycles I found out that he has a video up on YouTube showing his bicycle in action, rolling the streets (and along the beach) in Santa Monica California. You can also watch it below.



NOTE: It may be nice to see several of the bikes of the "Westside Impressionz" (a low rider bicycle club based in Santa Monica/Venice) be retrofitted with electric assist motors like the Vanguard Bicycle.

Related Posts:
- Compare commute: E-bike v. Car (video)
- E-Bike Commuting Tips(video)
- "Man Motoring on Hybrid Bike"(news video report)
- SFV Bike Culture(video)

Recommended Links:
- Cycle Santa Monica! community forum
- Santa-Monica/West-L.A./Venice critical mass community forum

Custom E-bikes


There is apparently a new electric bicycle manufacturer/retailer in Santa Monica. They are called "Vanguard Bicycles". The had a half page ad in the Santa Monica Daily Press in yesturday's ( May 11, 2007) ( see: PDF file) on page 10.

(NOTE: see Vanguard Bicycle in action on Youtube LINK)

On the ad the title read "Fully Customized Electric Hybrid Bicycles". And they described prices starting at $665 (see picture on the right. click on picture to enlarge).

It was interesting that next to the ad was an article titled "Old drivers balk at road testing". That is a carry on story about the dabate on the ability of people over 70 or 80 being fit to drive cars. And interestingly, electric bicycles may be a valuable alternative for people in their 70's and 80's to driving a car, not only because it would allow them to bike places that they may not have the physical ability to do so without the electric assist on these bikes. No driver's license is required.

Related Posts:
- Compare commute: E-bike v. Car (video)
- E-Bike Commuting Tips(video)
- "Man Motoring on Hybrid Bike"(news video report)

Recommended Links:
- Cycle Santa Monica! community forum
- Santa-Monica/West-L.A./Venice critical mass community forum

Friday, May 11, 2007

Clean Air

(click on images to enlarge. View video below)


I would like to bring you attention to a fairly recent "Green Party" advertisement from the UK.

In particular, there is a segment at around 2 minutes and 30 seconds into the commercial, there is a bicyclist scene where a guy in bicycle riding clothes, a bike helmet, and an air filtering mask. He pulls out a smal computer that reads:

What is the point of being WEALTHY
If you can't BREATHE the air?

If MODERN life makes us ill,
Then money will mean NOTHING.




What may be helpful is if each of the segments were split up in to the bit parts, with the footer and header of the commercial, such as the bicyclist scene.

Also, would have like to know what the sign language said. Captioning would be great addition to that segment.

If anyone know of this being done and/or where it can be found online, let me know.

All in all, I liked the sound. It was a moving piece of film making, story telling.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

South Park

In a recent South Park episode, South Park experiencing an increase in thier homeless population. The show brings attention to some of the the hilarity for the cause and fix of the homeless. And in the end, Kenny and his crew bring the South Park homeless to Santa Monica, and Kenny finishes the show with a skateboard jump over 3 homeless. This episode is called "Night Of The Living Homeless" (episode #1107). You can also download the whole show via iTunes.

Here is a clip from the show:


Perhaps in future episodes the South Park Crew will get bikes and experience some of the horrors of riding a bike against the people driving cars that become infected with "Road Rage" and take a ride with the Critical Mass riders or the Midnight Ridazz. (wink)(smile)

BTW, I did see some joggers in the Santa Monica scenes, but interestingly I didn't see any bicyclists. I suppose that was an oversight among the writers for South Park. Perhaps the South Park can do a remake of the show and throw in a few people on bicycles. Heck, even the Santa Monica Homeless(or almost homeless) have a large percentage that use a bicycle for their main form of transportation, in addition to their feet and the Big Blue Bus.

Recommended Links:
- Cycle Santa Monica! community forum
- Santa-Monica/West-L.A./Venice critical mass community forum

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Green America

If you liked watching the Nova program titled "Saved by the Sun", you may also like watching another new show being screened on Discovery Channel titled "Green: The New Red, White, and Blue". See the press release

Here is the Press Release:

Discovery Channel's GREEN: THE NEW RED, WHITE AND BLUE Brings Viewers Inside America's Energy Revolution Monday April 16, 12:28 pm ET
-- 90-Minute Special Hosted by Award Winning Author and Journalist Thomas L. Friedman --

SILVER SPRING, Md., April 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Award winning author and journalist Thomas L. Friedman travels the globe to unravel the tangled web of where Americans get energy, and reveals what viewers can do about their carbon footprint. Friedman visits the front lines of an energy revolution that is just taking shape, and reveals what is at stake for not only America but the world. The world premiere special GREEN: THE NEW RED, WHITE AND BLUE airs Saturday, April 21 at 9:00 PM (ET/PT) on Discovery Channel.

In GREEN: THE NEW RED, WHITE AND BLUE, Friedman, author of The World is Flat, sets out to discover how the greening of America could change the way we live. The United States is at the beginning of a surge toward green energy, powered by the sun, wind, water and even grass, but it will not be enough. The key is clean carbon-free energy, on a huge scale. Friedman explores many sources of carbon-free energy, including some that might sound counter- intuitive, such as coal and nuclear energy.

Visiting companies that are making a difference, such as Google, Wal-Mart and Texas Instruments, Friedman shares the energy-saving methods they are taking. Google is using hydro-electric power created by a dam while Wal-Mart is cutting by a third what each store spends on energy and doubling the fuel efficiency of its trucking fleet. Friedman also, Friedman explores ways that the Green family can help the environment with the cars they drive investigating ways that automobile manufacturers are experimenting with hybrid electricity-powered cars.

GREEN: THE NEW RED, WHITE AND BLUE examines ways American families can change the world and have the same effect as global giants like Wal-Mart.

GREEN: THE NEW RED, WHITE AND BLUE is produced for the Discovery Channel by Optomen Productions. Beth Hoppe is executive producer for Optomen and Julian Hobbs executive produced for Discovery Channel.

Discovery Communications, Inc. is the number-one nonfiction media company reaching more than 1.5 billion people in over 170 countries. Through TV and digital media, Discovery's 100-plus worldwide networks include Discovery Channel, TLC, Travel Channel, Animal Planet and Discovery Health. DCI is owned by Discovery Holding Company (Nasdaq: DISCA; DISCB), Cox Communications Inc., Advance/Newhouse Communications and John S. Hendricks, Discovery's founder and chairman. For more information please visit http://www.discovery.com

OEA

Did president Bush appoint his new Oil Addiction Czar to lead the charge on the "War On Oil Addiction"? Is the "OEA" (Oil Enforcement Agency) the new arm of the US government's fight to stomp out "oil addiction"? Are agents of this shadowy agency stage raids on Ford and other automotive dealerships across the USA for violatoins of law and the US mandate to fight oil addiction(see: America is Addicted to Oil)?

See videos below of a documentary on this new stealth agency.





Some tools that OEA uses to do their job include bicycles, tall bikes, electric scooters. The rest of their tools are classified and not accessable to the public.

Recommended Links:
- Cycle Santa Monica! community forum
- Santa-Monica/West-L.A./Venice community forum

Related posts:
- US Green Corps

Budapest Bikes

Reports (video and text) from the critical mass community in Hungary (see blog report and video)(in English)
that they had a record turn out at the last critical mass ride there(Budapest, Hungary). And, interestingly, they have much support from the local government, apparently, by providing police escort, and space to gather and socialize.

And I like the picture on the Hungarian critical mass website, which depicts a male and female adult holding their bicycles over their head and a little kid by the sides with a small bicycle. (see pic to the right)

Pimp My Ride

The "Pimp My Ride" tv show did an Earth Day Special. In that show the pimp a 1965 Chevy Impala from a gas guzzling car to a high power, turbo charged diesel engine. They pimped the interior with with new upolstery, featuring hemp cloth from "Environmental Textiles", and carpets made from recycled plastic bottles. They also included a year worth of biodiesel for the guy to cruise with.

What I think my have been a nice added touch would have been to added a stylish bicycle rack and a pimped out schwin beach cruiser retrofited with a electric assist hub motor (see: hybrid Bike video), and a lithium Ion battery pack that gets charged through the cars generator system.

And ofcource the bike would be pimped with matching candy apple color paint job with matching white racing stripes and accents, such as hand grips and seat. Hey! And one not throw on an XtraCycle to that Schwin beach cruiser and add a stylish rear seat that also has a hemp cloth seat cover. NICE!

Also, Arnold Schwartznegger did an introduction for this show and had a few walk on bits when the guys showed him the car.

Here are a couple clips from the show.

Recommended Links:
- Cycle Santa Monica! community forum
- SoCal Biodiesel community forum
- Air Powered Vehicles community forum
- Santa-Monica/West-L.A./Venice critical mass community forum

Monday, April 23, 2007

FlyAway

(see MTA promo video below. click on pictures to enlarge.)

There is an interesting, fairly new, transit bus line, called "Flyaway", that runs from Union Station and LAX transit center. They toute that it takes less than 40 minutes during the busiest time of day, to get end to end. I suppose that it would be a much faster trip during off-peak transit hours.

What I would like to know is how bicycles are accomodated on this bus line. The buses appear to be like Amtrak and Greyhound buses, with cargo bays under the buses. And if the policies are the same as the Amtrak and Greyhound buses, then I believe, bicycles can be stowed, without being boxed or disassembled, under the buses in those cargo bays. If anyone has more specific information, let me know or post in the comments so we all can know. See the promo video below.

And BTW, this seems to make a good transit option for those trying to get to and from Union Station in downtown L.A. and the LAX transit hub. And one nice feature about this service is that it runs 24 hours a day which may make it possible to get from LAX area to Santa Monica, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. How that can be done is by taking the bus to Union Station and then hoping on either the 33, 333, 4, or 304, MTA buses, which run 24 hours a day, or to hop on the Big Blue Bus #10 from Union Station, which is the fastest way to get from downtown Los Angeles to Santa Monica, even during rush hour, at the moment. However the Big Blue Bus stop running aroung 9pm most days of the week and doesn't begin picking up until about 6-7am many days during the week.



Recommended Links:
- Flyaway Brochure - by MTA
- Los Angeles World Airports info on Flyaway service
- Flyaway service (wikipedia article)

Friday, April 20, 2007

Tesla+Bike

In this video(2nd half) an inventer has created a Bendini magnetic motor(instruction s on building Bendini motor) by attaching magets along the rim of a bicycle wheel.

Perhaps this technology will be applied to future bicycles to provide extra power to the human power.



Video description:
Video is from Google video.

"I don't like the term perpetual-motion", says Sterling D. Allan, founder of Pure Energy Systems.... whatever you might call it, the Perendev & Bedini Motors that Sterling brought to TeslaTech 2005 certainly caused a stir. Check out our conference video for close-up footage & descriptions of both motors in operation! In Sterling's words: "The Perendev motor replication was built by Douglas K. Furr, a Ph.D. Mechanical Engineer, for PerenTech(.com), of which I was founder. In Furr's expert design, each of the rotors can be infinitely adjusted in relation to the other in the off-set of drilled holes, and the holes and pins enable one to insert and take out magnets with relative ease. I suppose if someone with more patience than myself were to tinker around with the device, they might achieve eureka in which the thing begins to accelerate."

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Ali Envrionment2

Ali G. talking to some people about the environment. Brilliant!

Ali Environ-mental

Ali G. is going totally "environ-mental"

I Love it!



Gives us more Ali G.!

Monorails Now

some one sent me this video and I thought you guys might appreciate it. It is an analysis on creating a network of monorails using the flood channels right of ways throughout Los Angeles County.

Monorails are cheaper to build, can be build faster, are quieter (in both low frequency, such as rumblings felt when a heavy bus or train rolls by on the street - and quieter in high freqency, which is heard in both subway trains, and in light rail trains), they are faster, and are more environmentally friendly in being adapted with less impact on the environment, they are more energy efficient than both subways, and lightrail train systems. They can be fully operated on electricity which can be aquired from renewable sources. repairs on monorails can also be accomplished faster than both subways, and light rail systems.

I welcome your comments on the concept of building an envornmentally friendly, cost effective, rapid transit, monorail network through Los Angeles County.

Thanks,



Related Posts:
- "Where Are The Monorails?"(AltCar Expo panel-video clip)