Suitcase PowercycleV2
Suitcase PowercycleV2
Suitcase PowercycleV2
Part 1. Here's some midget transportation that will tuck away in your
car's trunk—ready and eager for side trips or just plain motor sport
By CARL S. BATES
FEBRUARY, 1955
127
entire weight. Best news about this pint- size
powercycle is its cost—about $100 for materials,
and $10 to $15 for welding if you don't do this
part of the assembly yourself. Commercial
powercycles regularly sell for over $200 to $400,
and we don't know of any domestic commercial
model that folds up the way this fellow does.
The model shown here is powered by a 2-1/2 hp
Briggs and Stratton engine and, to keep down
cost and space displacement, uses an automatic
clutch pulley (acting like a fluid drive) and no
gear shift. The speed you will get out of this
combination of course won't be sensational, nor
is any unit designed with such a low horse-
power engine intended for winning hill climbs.
But it should get you there and back with ease.
For compactness, a retrievable pull starter is
recommended, as opposed to either the rope
type (that's hard work, son) or the kick type
(which would stick out too far for driving
comfort).
Make the frame (Fig. 3) first. Thin-walled
electrical conduit (T.W.C.) is used for all frame
parts. Start by laying out the frame members
Note clutch and rear wheel drive, and folded-up front full-size on heavy paper or cardboard from the
foot rest. In Part 2, we will show you how to add a dimensions given in Fig. 2, or use the craft
hand-operated rear wheel brake (not shown here) in prints which show these frame pieces full size.
addition to the foot-powered front wheel brake, for Cut the straight piece (A in Fig. 2) and fit the
those states that require a brake on each wheel.
POWERCYCLE
By CARL S. BATES
, PART 2
Craft Print Project No. 215
. V.
•«sfc»*^
Rotating Seed Treating Machine
W ELD at the points of contact a length
of 3/4 inch pipe extending through holes
tapped diagonally in each head of an oil drum.
Two sections of 3/4 inch shafting, 6 and 4-
inches long, are welded into the pipe.
A door fits over a 14-inch by 12-inch open-
ing, with butt hinges and a 2-inch bolt weld-
ed on opposite sides. Door is made dust-tight
by welding on the drum a piece of angle iron,
1 by 1 by 1/4 inches, with a gap cut in one
side. Frame is of 1 inch pipe, welded. Legs
are 3 feet long and are braced with 3/4 inch
pipe welded to the legs.