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Posted 11/12/2016 8:33:50 PM |
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Has NO LIFE!!
Last Login: 12/4/2023 11:08:55 PM
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hey spidey,
Happened to see this old post on the BatPod that was related to a Popular Mechanics article.
"Enter the Bat-Pod, a motorcycle-ATV hybrid that lands eye-popping stunts sans CGI, a hand-built bike that fires grappling hooks--while shape-shifting.
After picking through junkyards, a local Home Depot and that surprisingly hands-on garage, Nolan and production designer Nathan Crowley took a month to assemble a foam-and-plastic model for Batman's new ride--enough like the Tumbler, but with a heavy-hauling look of its own. "But to actually have a look at what we were thinking, we went down to Warner [Brothers] and got the front wheels off the Batmobile," Crowley says.
When he first laid eyes on the Bat-Pod mockup, special effects supervisor Chris Corbould wasn't sure if his director actually knew anything about motorcycles. But that's what makes The Dark Knight at once a throwback superhero movie and a green-screen-light breakthrough in digital Hollywood: It turns fantasy into reality. And building a concept vehicle without a team of automotive engineers was one of its biggest challenges. "The gauntlet had been thrown down," Corbould says.
While the filmmakers and Warner Brothers have been tight-lipped about any vehicle specs in the movie, Corbould clearly had to reinvent how a motorcycle's systems make it run. Nolan and Crowley's original sketches had no tailpipe, but anything with a motor needs an outlet for exhaust. Weaving around the bike's carbon-fiber and Kevlar body and steel chassis, the design team built the exhaust system into the frame, ducting it through the hollow steel/aluminum/magnesium tubing. Two months later, the high-performance, water-cooled, single-cylinder engine--geared toward the lower end for faster acceleration--was ready to power the Pod. Only there was another headache: Who in the world could drive this thing?
Bruce Wayne's monster-truck tires worked just fine on the Tumbler, but integrating them with the Bat-Pod's steering system was "totally bizarre," Corbould says. At about 20 in. wide--enough to balance the bike without a kickstand--the wheels didn't look like they would go anywhere but straight ahead. "We skimmed layers of rubber off and then started changing the angles of the steering joints and things like that," says Corbould. But that didn't stop the rear tires from blowing in test after test.
At the suggestion of stunt driver Jean-Pierre Goy, the design team restored the rear tire to its original radius and modified only the front, allowing Goy to control the bike. Still the only one can actually drive the Bat-Pod, Goy refused to drive any regular motorcycles during filming--the Pod was just too one-of-a-kind, too confusing for other on-the-road styles.
Then there's that little matter of gadgetry. Besides his extreme wealth and dedication to wiping out mob crime in Gotham, there's nothing super about Bruce Wayne--and that might make him the most gear-loaded superhero of all time. Although it's not Caped Crusader style to resort to guns (modded goggles and body armor get more screen time in The Dark Knight), you have to fight fire with fire when The Joker's packing heat. So the Bat-Pod joins the legion of gun-toting movie motorcycles with .50-cal. machine guns and 40 mm cannons built directly into its framework. Then the bike one-ups them with its pneumatically launched grappling hooks, which flip an 18-wheeler over in one key shootout.
In order to give Batman the ability to maneuver under low clearances, the Bat-Pod can physically lower and elongate itself. On set, the front forks extended and the chassis hugged the ground, positioning Goy parallel to the ground--and that's before pulling a 360. "The saddle is free to rotate," Crowley says. "It allows you to do all kinds of odd movement within the frame of the bike."
Another cool design element: Those footrests are actually the bike's radiator. But like the exhaust, the normal components had to be hidden to keep the bike's profile true to the original concept. Then there was what Corbould saw as a potentially disastrous--and dangerous--design flaw: Without mudflaps, would Batman's cape get caught up in the wheels? The design team spent weeks on a work-around. Maybe the cape would have a kind of ejection device, or even a way to suck back in to the all-new Batsuit. But it was all for naught: During test rides, the cape trailed Goy flawlessly through the streets of lower Gotham. The image, Corbould says, "was just iconic."
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Posted 11/12/2016 8:46:44 PM |
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Has NO LIFE!!
Last Login: 12/4/2023 11:08:55 PM
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hey spidey,
One more question.
Has anyone other than Jean-Pierre Goy been able to ride the BatPod to a high level of performance?
vertigo
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Posted 11/13/2016 3:09:57 AM |
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Forum Guru
Last Login: 10/10/2023 2:34:08 PM
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I couldnt say. Not looked into it.
www.spidey4fun.com
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Posted 12/1/2016 10:46:09 PM |
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Forum Guru
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Just about finished Emp gun prop. Still needs a little finishing and some light and sound effect fitted.
www.spidey4fun.com
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Posted 12/4/2016 1:10:00 AM |
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Forum Guru
Last Login: 10/10/2023 2:34:08 PM
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Had a little fun today.
www.spidey4fun.com
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Posted 12/4/2016 11:31:28 AM |
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Supreme Being
Last Login: 2/1/2024 7:08:20 PM
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Nice suit. Is that from UD Replicas? Wrong Joker though.
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Posted 12/4/2016 3:19:58 PM |
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Forum Guru
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The suit is made from Urethane with the same mesh fabric they used on the movie suit. It's a costume. So nope.. not from UD replicas. Though I should get one of David's as mine is impossible to wear when riding the bike. It's way too restrictive. The Joker didn't mean to get in the photo. He just happened to be standing there.
This pic better..
www.spidey4fun.com
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Posted 12/4/2016 3:44:42 PM |
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Forum Guru
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Here's a quick vid from Saturday. I wanted to see if the arm guards restrict the steering... and they do. I'll need to make them a little wider at the elbows.
www.spidey4fun.com
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Posted 12/4/2016 4:49:27 PM |
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Supreme Being
Last Login: 2/1/2024 7:08:20 PM
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Do you plan to make it "street legal"? I would love to see it tooling down the highway. Sure would turn heads.
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Posted 12/4/2016 6:33:44 PM |
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Forum Newbie
Last Login: 8/11/2017 6:54:35 PM
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GREAT WORK What is the top speed
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