Ok this is going to sound like a strange request.
For my A2 DT project I'm designing and building a rolling road for a small electric car. It needs to be able to produce resistance approximately like the car will experience in a racing environment and allow long high load tests. The common method used in car rolling roads seems to be a water based resistance system, which sounds rather complicated or rarely an electric motor based system, which sounds more complicated.
A simple solution I've come up with would be to use air resistance trapping the air in bucket like things attached to some kind of hub. It would also have the advantage of offering progressive resistance, like drag does to the car in the real world. So I do a bit of googling and something smacks me across the face, most simple gym machines use air resistance to offer resistance and have some kind of system of changing the resistance.
Unfortunately google hasn't turned up anything much of a technical nature on the internals of gym equipment, even some photos of the buckets/blades and the system to vary resistance would be a start.
Or if anybody else has suggestions of an alternative system that would be very much appreciated as well.
For my A2 DT project I'm designing and building a rolling road for a small electric car. It needs to be able to produce resistance approximately like the car will experience in a racing environment and allow long high load tests. The common method used in car rolling roads seems to be a water based resistance system, which sounds rather complicated or rarely an electric motor based system, which sounds more complicated.
A simple solution I've come up with would be to use air resistance trapping the air in bucket like things attached to some kind of hub. It would also have the advantage of offering progressive resistance, like drag does to the car in the real world. So I do a bit of googling and something smacks me across the face, most simple gym machines use air resistance to offer resistance and have some kind of system of changing the resistance.
Unfortunately google hasn't turned up anything much of a technical nature on the internals of gym equipment, even some photos of the buckets/blades and the system to vary resistance would be a start.
Or if anybody else has suggestions of an alternative system that would be very much appreciated as well.