.

With all the furor over Supreme Court partisanship, something I think is much more talked about than real, it’s easy to miss the consistency with which the court has ruled on voting regulations.

They are the state’s affairs.

Even Pennsylvania, which seemed to violate the plain meaning of federal law, was left to the state’s own rules. Other cases like California and North Carolina have been left to the states as well, with little regard to Democratic or Republican facitonalism. It’s not absolute, but it’s the clear trend.

Gerbiling

Is the greatest term I’ll learn today, possibly this year.

A monowheel is a single wheeled transport wherein the rider sites inside or beside the wheel as opposed to on top, like a unicycle. Early ones were largely pedaled, but modern monowheels often have engines. Kerry McLean builds them today.

A problem with a monowheel is stability, and if the rider tries to stop too quickly, momentum can overcome gravity causing the rider to spin around inside. There’s a video of this on the McLean link above, and it’s called ‘gerbiling.’ The refernce is to a gerbil loosing footing inside a rodent wheel and spinning around.

That is fantastic and utterly made my day.

Why? What did you think it meant?

.

Don’t fight with people for agreeing with you. Don’t make fun of someone who’s doing something you want done. Don’t antagonize someone who’s been moved to your side, changed their mind to agree with your arguments, or is helping you now merely because they didn’t help you in the past.

Chris Christie wrote an op-ed in support of wearing masks. Good on him. I hope he does well.

Drag Coefficients

I’d like to clarify what Cd, the drag coefficient, is.

The drag of a thing, like a car, moving through a fluid, in this case air, is a complex function called…the drag function. It’s a part of the retarding function, but that includes friction and other stuff. In general, the drag function is of the form Sum n (v^n * Cd * Sa). (WordPress doesn’t have good equation fonts, sorry.

What’s going on is that each term is three components, the velocity bit, which is raised to a power, the drag coefficient bit, and the surface area of the thing (car).

The velocity bit is raised to a power, and that power goes up as velocity increases. This is the reason for the old 55 mph speed limit, because for a lot of vehicles, v^2 goes to v^3 or v^4 at 55 mph. However it doesn’t go up at the same velocity for all vehicles, and lower order terms don’t vanish. That’s why we sum all the terms together.

Regarding the Cd and Sa, imagine you’re looking at the car from the front. The surface area is like the area of the silhouette. It would be exactly the same if the vehicle didn’t have any curves or swoops or bits that make more surface area behind other bits of surface area, but cars do have such swoops, so the surface area is a bit complicated. Some of this complexity is approximated in the Cd. The Cd, drag coefficient, is how well something OF THAT SURFACE AREA goes through the air. So it’s a bit meaningless to talk about Cds by themselves because a Volkswagen Bus has a lower drag coefficient than many small cars. The VW Bus has much more surface area though, so it has higher drag. What’s more, the n part of that v^n above does seem to depend on Cd or Cd*Sa combined, so there’s complexity in there.

The drag function also changes for different air densities, pressures, mixtures, etc.

The point here is that just comparing Cd between cars is extremely misleading. The VW Passat has a lower drag coefficient than the old Supra but because the Supra had less surface area, it had a lower Cd*Sa. (That link uses frontal area and wrapped secondary surface area into the drag coefficient (I assume))

Anyway, it’s not just the coefficient you should talk about. It’s the combination, and honestly, the whole function is complicated. It’s an approximation of an unknown physical interaction which can be considered a hidden variable. What would be useful is to talk about drag at a speed and list a few data points, much like we list 0-60 mph and 0-100 mph when talking about acceleration.

Want to know why we don’t?

It’s extremely hard to measure and doesn’t make good copy.

Cd is easy to measure and makes good copy.

Honda NM-4 Vultus

I really wanted to like this bike. The sheer difference of it made me want to like it. It had paniers built in. It was all weird looking. It wasn’t another generic sport bike, naked, or cruiser.

It was $12k with 670cc engine. The paniers were tiny. I couldn’t fit boots in there, much less a helmet. Forget luggage.

It would have been a fine $6k bike. It would have been wonderful at $12k with a 1800cc. They really should have thought twice about the luggage.

But it couldn’t back up what it said, and it cost way too much for what it was. What it was was fine…for an NC700.

Ah, but what could have been.