The name Sinclair was stamped on single-person electric transport way back in 1985 with the world's first mass produced electric vehicle – the Sinclair C5. Fast forward to 2010, drop a wheel, shed lots of weight, add modern batteries and you start to get a picture of the newly developed Sinclair Research X-1. Essentially an electric-assist recumbent bicycle with an open-sided fairing, it has the aerodynamics, ergonomic pedaling position and weather protection of a velomobile, yet its weight and price are closer to those of an electric-assist bicycle.
Sinclair is widely known for its C5 pedal/electric three-wheeler, which was designed by company founder and pioneering inventor of the ZX range of computers, Sir Clive Sinclair. The mid-80s vehicle was a commercial flop – only around 17,000 units were sold. Reasons cited for its lack of popularity include poor battery life, worries about drivers not being able to see it on the road and rider exposure to the elements. Look around at the current landscape littered with electric-vehicles and single-person transport concepts however, and you could well argue that it simply suffered from being a vehicle ahead of its time.
The Sinclair C5
A quarter of a century later – not surprisingly – the X-1 appears to have addressed all of those problems with its modern-day 24V lithium battery, tall stance and some rain protection via its acrylic bubble canopy. It also has a 190W MCR pancake motor linked to the rear wheel by a fixed gear drive chain, an integrated roll cage and a carbon fiber monocoque chassis with built-in front and rear lights. It all adds up to a total weight of 30kg (66lbs), which is the same as an eSpire electric-assist mountain bike.
If there’s anything that looks iffy on the X-1, it’s those little 16-inch wheels. They won’t be the greatest for attaining high speeds, and look like they would fit nicely inside of a good-sized pothole.
The Sinclair Research X-1 is priced at £595 (US$846), with an expected delivery date of July 2011.
The steering system is prone to flex, inherently. The wheels may be wide enough for potholes, but not high enough for curbs. Smaller is stronger, especially in spoke construction, ah!
Still out in the weather too much, still traveling single, not tandem and still setting where your head is lower than those in the cars on the road. I prefer to design for equal head hight (to car) and a semi-recumbent where the heels never come up to the hips, more like the nicer gymnasium-bound exercise bikes put you. Side impact tube, a heater via propane add on in winter...etc.
Nice to see a pricepoint for mass item, the velos are too rare to compare and project against.
Walt, low kinetic human hybrid llc
However, a big safety oversight in my view is Sir Sinclair neglected to put safety lights or good sized reflectors on the upper back of the X-1 pedal-electric hybrid for night travel. Certainly the latter could easily be put on by the buyer, post purchase, but still, the cost to put on at least reflectors as factory standard is negligible, and it\'s lack inexcusable imho.
Not even close. It was underpowered, uncomfortable and had poor cycling ergonomics. The C1 looks better, but may still suffer from the third unless that seat position can be adjusted forward and back.
Rohn,
The Prius has 15\" rims, not wheels. Add another 8\" or so of tire diameter. Plus its tires are about 7x wider than the X-1 tires. It does look like they did put a leading link front suspension on this X-1, which would help a little bit with potholes.
I would like numbers of how much work is required for various velocities.
And a question with sitting in an enclosed area, with a two wheeled vehicle, how does it stay upright when at a stop?
It would be nice if a standard feature included reflectors on the side and front and rear lights nothing on the order of a car light but I cannot see how to attach a bicycle light Does it have mounting positions?
waitinseatle, the 16 inch wheels comparison is apples and oranges. The wheel size reporte for an automobile is just for the rim, not rim and tire. A check of several online tire stores gave a typical diameter for the tires for a 16 inche rim of 25-28 inches with the smallest being 22.91 inches and the largest being 29.94 inches. This vehicle has a total wheel diameter of 16 inches, that is why a pot hole is a bigger problem for it than an automobile.
I do find the price most attractive.