58 Tiger Cub Motorcycle

FRS 106, Michael Littman – Spring 2026

Week 9 Class Notes (posted by Eugene)

Monday Notes

No recap

Presentation by Bill Becker – Discovering the Motorcycle Wheel

About Bill – retired architect, worked with Littman on toy trains at Franklin Institute. Did a lot of educational work, nonprofit work. Decided he wanted to work on motorcycles after retiring, been a long interest. Lots of shop experience, loves to make things and now focuses on antique toys and building them from scratch

Looking at wheel – through lens of materials, design, and physics

Round – good geometry for moving things

1790 – first bicycle, made out of wood and radial spokes

1885 – motorized bicycle, still wooden and radial spokes but has a transmission

1895 – no longer wood, metal spokes and metal hub, horizontal motor with jack shaft, back wheel has a filler and has a brake, block of wood that pushes down onto the wheel

1960 – tiger cub – spokes no longer radial and cross and triangulate, drive mechanism that drives the rear wheel

1960 – casting wheels that replace spokes

Today – cast wheels made out of carbon fiber strong and light

 

What are some major forces that played a role in the evolution of the motorcycle wheel?

  • Need stronger wheels because motor power
  • Materials improve and become better
  • Depends on the surface the bike travels on, different wheels for paved areas vs mountain bikes
  • Increased speeds

 

One of most important factors

Weight – make lighter

Wheels have inertia, so if it is heavy it takes more work to make it move

 

Response to forces – better design

Turning more requires different forces esp when faster, impact forces

 

Technology – better machinery

 

Materials in wheel

Each material has unique properties

  • Strength
  • Flexibility
  • Hardness
  • Workability (how easily it can be machined, malleable and ductible)
  • Resistance to corrosion
  • Conductivity
  • Friction
  • Cost

 

Materials in rim – mild steel sheet, rolled into correct profile, welded, plated with copper nickel and chromium

Needs to be strong rigid, workable, resistant to corrosion, cost effective, available

 

Cold vs Hot while machining – if hot then it is malleable and can change shape

If you heat tempered things then immediately cool it then it makes it stronger

Copper is opposite, depending on how it is cooled it can be hard or soft

 

Spokes – mild steel wire

Has to be strong efficient (small amount of material), workable, resistant to corrosion, cost, available

 

Hub

Attached motorcycle to wheel

Needs to be light weight, conducts heat, workable, natural resistance to corrosion, cost effective, available

Needs to conduct heat as tires get hot from braking

 

Bearings

Extremely hard, withstands wear, reduces friction, cost effective, available

 

Tire

Flexible, durable, moldable, resilient, high coefficient of fraction, cost effective, available 

 

Designers select materials based on their suitability for the task

Best performance at lowest cost = efficiency

 

What are the forces on our wheel?

Loads in engineering terms

  • Dead loads = weight of the wheel itself and the motorcycle
  • Live load = rider, passenger, gas and oil, luggage – the loads because of what we’re asking the motorcycle to do, asking it to carry passengers
  • Static loads – loads when object at rest, wheels at rest – effects of gravity
  • Dynamics loads – loads when moving, wheels in motion – effects of applying motor power and acceleration, effects of braking and deceleration, effects of turning the motorcycle, effects of striking an object – impact forces

 

Forces act in a directional manner, geometry of the wheel reacts to forces

Spokes are arranged in crosscrossing teams

Within ur teams you have 2 spokes that focus on acceleration and declaration and 2 spokes focus on side forces from turning

Loads are distributed in teams, better than radial

 

How do forces affect the elements within a structure?
5 basic forces acting on elements

  • Compression, squeezing
  • Tension, stretching/pulling
  • Shear, trying to break molecular bond by cutting
  • Bending, hybrid of compression and tension, middle of beam is neutral axis not affected
  • Torsion

 

The tire is for cushioning the other elements from impact

The rim is purely compression ring that supports the tires

Spokes member the support fo the rim and the hub

Hub tension member that supports the spokes

 

The 20 top spokes provide tensile reaction when static

Spokes unable to hold compression by design, if compression it just pops out

 

The 20 backward leaning spokes provide tensile reaction when accelerating

 

20 right or left spokes provide tensile reaction when turning

 

in team

  • 2 contribute to acceleration 
  • 2 contribute to declaration
  • 2 contribute to side to side

 

Applying forces to an element creates stress

And the reaction to the stress is strain

 

Young’s Modulus – stress strain diagram

 

Elastic region – strain goes back, not permanent

Plastic zone – deforms

 

The transition from elastic to plastic is at the yield point, amount of stress it can take drops before it starts to harden itself and reaches ultimate strength before breaking

 

Spokes must be tuned well as tightening one spoke affects a bunch of other spokes and you need everything in balance

 

Wednesday Notes

Rolled threads – stronger and higher quality than cut threads

Two rollers press into a bolt and molds the threads

 

If overtighten a screw, it stretched instead and if tightened too much it goes past yield point

 

The finer your thread, the more mechanical advantage, and the more likely you are to damage it

 

Steel is a hard material that can be magnetizied

Soft iron – pure iron which can be an electromagnet but can’t be a permanent magnet

 

Recap

Wheels – prepped bearings and worked on spokes with Bill, pressed in using arbor press

Electrical – sandblasting

Clutch/Oil – started old motorcycle, ran ok, at first no spark because no lead in, more adjustments need to be made for the engine, carburetor, and the timing. Also tighten all bolts

Engine – laser cut gaskets, took out studs and wrist pin from old engine, will try to hone the barrel instead of boring it

 

Chapter 3

The idea of dependency

Idea of learning by doing

Autonomy vs agency

Autonomy stereo , agency is playing musical instrument

you’re at the mercy of listening to what was already made, can’t play the things you want

 

Ikea – following someone else’s instructions, makes it feel like you did it yourself but you are given a solution

Makes it feel like you accomplished something

Also if you can’t do it, it puts the blame on you.

Ikea, Lego, Buildabear, are selling the idea that you did it yourself

Marketing makes you want to buy more, 

 

Not at complete liberty, even if you have 20 options you still have to pick a premade option

Hard to make your own custom things

To do things yourself takes more time than to use premade things

Power comes with agency

 

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