You are right about the electronics not having an effect on the suspension and I apologize for that. I was blinkered and was focused on something else entirely.
WEIGHT of the user.
Which is what this thread is about and you have made some comments on this.
If you sat in my chair, the settings, suspension and tyre pressures would be no good for you.
Your WEIGHT would create more rolling resistance.
You can add more air to the tyres, but adding too much would make the tyres burst, so that alone would not be enough. So you would need to adjust the settings quite a bit.
Now those adjustments would be far to aggressive for me and other lightweights, making the chair very jumpy, but for you and other heavyweight users it would feel ok.
And the HEAVIER you are, the more nose heavy a chair would BECOME.
In this thread, you have said;
So it turns and fits better in crowded places, vans, houses, pubs or allows me to turn around in a small toilet and come out forwards. Where your chair can barely fit in. I have said that the Storm 4 is a lwb chair.
Now while most wouldn't want a powerchair this tippy, I do! This is too extreme for most. Which means, your chair would be totally useless carrying shopping on the back or going up hills.
That's why I NEED a lwb chair.
Everything is set to super delayed. 1. No. It is set for Mr Average.
An independent wheelchair distributor, with over 30 years experience, said;
I would say that it has been set up for Mr Average and that setting suits most people .
I ever saw or tested. So trust me …..2. But that is the perspective of a 20 stone man.
My turn acceleration is set to 100.
My turn deceleration is also set to 100.
I also have forward and reverse acc set to 100 too. 3. Because you are HEAVIER. Remember;
Your WEIGHT would create more rolling resistance.
You can add more air to the tyres, but adding too much would make the tyres burst, so that alone would not be enough. So you would need to adjust the settings quite a bit.
but begins to turn afterwards when it wants, not when you tell it, then speeds the turn up and does long after you wanted it to. It means you slam the stick fully left or right to make a correction and it gradually starts to accelerate into a turn over about 2 seconds period... The turn RATE increases as you wait. Yawn. Instant small accurate corrections are impossible. So you are heading for a door frame at speed, and no fast correction is possible. So in the panic at the lack of affect a few mm of stick had, you give it some more... Now the first bit starts to take affect (late) followed by the extra stick you also added in panic as nothing was happening... And the chair turns too much, too late. And then you cant STOP it turning because of:
Turn deceleration... This is a delay is STOPPING the turn. Once its going left nothing you do stops that. So you have turned too far due to the above, and so slam the stick the opposite way in panic. But it has no affect as decelaration delay makes sure that it cannot! So you now hit the opposite door frame to the first one you were scared of. This is followed by the chair lurching at the opposite side about 1 second later and you guessed it, you cant stop that either. Yours is set to 40. Also totally un-drivable - and worse than turn delay.
You get a SMALL instant response which then accelerates (builds ever faster) to catch up with the amount of stick you initially gave it, later on.
And you then suddenly zero the stick. Let go. Now. at a 10% TURN DECELERATION setting, it takes approx. 4 full seconds before the turn command dies off to zero. You rotate maybe another full revolution or so. It does not stop rotating as seen from the window, instantly, as you release the stick but it slows down gradually over 4 seconds to a stop. But it isn't now pointing the same way as when you released the stick.
Now, imagine you are at full speed along a curved footpath, you are turning on the curve so you have some "turn" stick held in too. And now need to stop turning and go dead straight instead for an instant. To miss a pot hole, someone that steps out in your way, or to hit a narrow doorway opening. You have a fraction of a second to do this.
You want it to STOP TURNING right NOW. You do not want a further 4 seconds of turning that begins to reduce then gradually decreases until it goes straight. Because you will hit something. You will now tell me that your chair DOES stop turning. It does not, it BEGINS to turn less, the rate of turn decreases instantly, but ALL of the turning still takes a few seconds to cease altogether. That's why its called turn deceleration. Because its not instant.
But to make it stop turning WHEN YOU CHOOSE this has got to be set to 100. Or SOME turn continues after you let go. Making steering accurately (or in fact stop turning instantly) impossible. It will continue turning for a short time after you zero the stick...
Then as it rotates on the spot, let go of the stick instantly. It should stop turning left or right almost INSTANTLY.
Its a liability at speed in areas where you need accurate control.
Because it keeps on turning after you decided you were aimed correctly or overshoots (overcontrols) because you gave it "some more" in response to a slow turn acc as not enough was happening. The net result of all this is about 4 seconds of over controlling and correcting. Could you respond to all the points above, as the videos show clearly;[url]
http://www.timsstroke.co.uk/#/proof-is- ... 4587264903[/url]
4. That it doesn't turn when it wants.
5. It doesn't take about 2 seconds to turn-accelerate.
6. Instant corrections ARE possible.
7. When the stick is zero'd, it doesn't take 4 seconds to stop turning so it is facing the wrong way.
8. If it is 'super delayed' how come I can swerve around people and pot-holes etc.
The 1st video shows almost nothing but a blurred joystick that you barely move about. And you are turning and changing direction so slowly that even if the camera was in a sensible position that showed the scenery too, that it still wouldn't show any delay. Because you are moving and manoevering / turning way to slowly and gently to show up any delay or accelerations... 9. Look at the trees. I guess I am doing about 6/7mph and making millimetre adjustments to the stick.
You need a reference for your hand.
He NEEDS his palms resting on the controllers case to have the fine 1 or 2mm movement skills required. 10. You can clearly see, in the videos, that my hand is resting on the side.
But he is going to need to move a lot faster than that to show that it steers properly. He moves the stick almost slower than the acc/dec so disguises it. But he has no urgent need to change it if he only moves about slowly as shown in the video. But even at those speeds it will "feel" more accurate and give more user confidence if set to 100 or even 90.
Its ok if all you want to do is creep about slowly inside like my granny, I go about walking speed in the house. The video shows that. I slow down for the external door, as there is a metal threshold of about 1.5 inches. If I were to hit this at speed, the chair would jolt and subsequently, cause my hand to move the stick and the chair would respond accordingly and as there is only 1.5/2 inches either side, I do not want the chair to move, so I MUST drive slowly.
As for the bedroom door. I park right by the door wall, so I have to do a sharp right to exit, so I go through the doorway at about a 45 degree angle! The chair JUST fits through with mm to spare.
11. If they are so “crap”, why do people buy them.
12. Do you not think end users would have complained about them being so “crap” to their distributor and they in turn, would have told the manufacturer.
Please answer 1 – 12.Anyway, this is MY Storm 4 with ME in it!
Could you now weigh more than 20 stone? IF you do, you may be too heavy for the chairs.
When did you last weigh yourself?
I last weighed myself in 2007 and I was JUST over 12 stone. I had a 34” waist then, now it's 32”.
I see you go to the pub. 4 pints is about equivalent in calories as my total daily intake.
I realize that we are all different, but I know, only too well, how easy and quick you can put on weight once in a wheelchair.