Ok fellas,
I was just in a coffin race in my town over the weekend. The only rules: 6" wheel max, steering and brakes. That's it. Some found 6" wheels that used tires to have a larger diameter. Some used urethane scooter wheels (I did) and some used skake/longboard wheels. There is a 10' push zone at the start and the slope is constant until the very end. The coffins with scooter wheels seemed to do the best. However, the initial push almost always determined the outcome.
Aerodynamics are pretty much thrown out the door since this is more of an adult/fun/artistic kinda race
From my physics classes years and years ago, I know that a heavier car will keep it's momentum longer than a lighter car - assuming that there is no friction on the wheels. That was the thing everyone seemed to forget. The heavier cars seemed to go good right at the start, but to me, the weight was creating too much friction on the bearings thus slowing them down. But - the lighter cars seemed to run out of gas too.
I used 4 wheels on the rear of my coffin and 2 on the front. I was thinking for next year that I'd add even more wheels toward the rear - perhaps 4-5 per side. Spaced kinda like roller blades/inline skates.
I know that ideally, the weight should be balanced on the wheels - at least I think it should be.
Do you guys think that adding 4-6 additional wheels to my coffin would help it carry more weight by spreading the load out ?
Would I be adding friction by adding more wheels ?
Any ideas or suggestions here ?
Of course my coffin had a motorcycle related theme:
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