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Montague Bikes

 
Wikipedia: Montague Bikes
"Paratrooper" bike by Montague

Montague is a bicycle manufacturer that makes folding bicycles for civilian and military customers.

Contents

Frame design and folding system

Montague Montague Corporation was formed in 1987 by David Montague, while in graduate school at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Their company designs and produces full-size, high-performance bicycles that fold (folding bicycle)

History

The first bicycle designed by Montague was dubbed the "Montague BiFrame" for its patented Concentrus system, which unites the two parts of the frame with concentric seat tubes, one nested inside the other. This system allows a bike with a full-size frame to fold in half while maintaining the structural integrity of the design.

Military partnerships

In 1997, Montague received a two-year grant from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), who recognized the importance of folding bikes, to work with the United States Marines in developing the Tactical Electric No Signature (TENS) Mountain bike.[citation needed] For this project Montague developed a new folding design, enabling the bike to fold faster for Paratrooper exit from military aircraft while also increasing its load bearing capacity. This gave rise to the Paratrooper folding Tactical Mountain Bicycle, Montague’s non-electric Military Mountain Bike.

The following diagram demonstrates the efficiency of Bike/Electric Bike Infantry[citation needed]:

System Load Capacity Daily Range Speed Fuel per Day Food per Day Water per day
infantry 50 lbs 25 miles 3 mph 3 lbs 24 lbs
bicycle infantry 50 lbs 75 miles 10 mph 3 lbs 24 lbs
horse cavalry 100 lbs 100 miles 15 mph 40 lbs hay 3 lbs 164 lbs
electric bicycle infantry 50 lbs 100 miles 15 mph electric charge station 3 lbs 24 lbs
motorcycle infantry 100 lbs 300 miles 40 mph 55 lbs gasoline 3 lbs 24 lbs
medium truck 10,000 lbs 400 miles 40 mph 350 lbs diesel 6 lbs 48 lbs
APC 10,000 lbs 300 miles 35 mph 665 lbs diesel 6 lbs 48 lbs

See also

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Montague Bikes" Read more