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RE: So it's not an MG, but...

To: "'mgs@autox.team.net'" <mgs@autox.team.net>
Subject: RE: So it's not an MG, but...
From: Alan Pfau <apfau@ismi.net>
Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 21:59:03 -0600
Hi All,
        I found this interesting since I live near Owosso and I see one of 
these vehicles setting in the backyard of a nearby house. Its' been setting 
there for years unmoved. I can't really say as I find them attractive. It seems 
like these came out when many of the kit cars (including those MG look-a-likes) 
were popular.
        Thanks for the education though, I've always wondered about it since it 
looked like something that was made on a limited production basis or maybe a 
prototype.

Alan Pfau


----------
From:   Tab Julius[SMTP:tab@penworks.com]
Sent:   Wednesday, January 31, 2001 2:52 PM
To:     mgs@autox.team.net
Subject:        So it's not an MG, but...

1987 Owosso Motor Car Company Pulse
Image: http://www.hemmings.com/images/pulse.jpg

   Although it looks like a not-yet-completed airplane, this automotive 
offering was first designed by  Bede Aircraft Corporation of Medina, Ohio, 
in the early 1980s as the Lightstar, and was built by that company until 
the early 1990s. In the late '80s, Owosso Motor Car Company of 
Owosso,  Michigan licensed the design from Bede and offered it for sale as 
the Pulse, as depicted here.  Owosso referred to it as a Ground Cruising 
Recreational Vehicle or autocycle, because of its excellent motorcycle-like 
performance and closed bodywork.

   Among its attributes were a co-efficient of drag of .112, three optional 
powerplants and five or six-speed transmission, depending upon the engine 
used. Though it features four-wheels, the outer two (8-inch-diameter) are 
outriggers, with only one contacting the ground at rest or during low- and 
moderate-speed turns. The framework is of welded steel tube construction, 
with a fiberglass body shell. An integral roll bar situated ahead of the 
driver provided ample rollover protection and it could be operated with the 
canopy closed or slid back and open. The interior accommodated a driver and 
passenger seated in tandem, with just under six cubic feet of storage space.

   With its engine selections motorcycle-derived (Yamaha 400-cc 
two-cylinder, 66-hp V-4 500-cc, and 85-hp 1100-cc horizontally-opposed 
four-cylinder) one would expect the controls also to be motorcycle-like, 
but that was not the case. Instead, a standard round steering wheel, 
right-side mounted shifter and clutch, and brake and gas pedals were used. 
The claimed top speed of the base two-cylinder four-stroke with six-speed 
transmission was 105 mph at 10,000 rpm, while fuel mileage was a miserly 70 
miles per gallon. Both the 400-cc and 500-cc engines drove the rear wheel 
via a chain with tension adjuster, with the 1100-cc offering a driveshaft 
linkage to the rear wheel. Front and rear wheels were 13 inches in 
diameter, mounted on trailing arms and damped by Gabriel hydraulic shock 
absorbers. Braking was accomplished with hydraulic discs mounted at the 
front and rear wheels.

   Though a helmet was not required because of the canopy and roll bar, a 
motorcycle endorsement on one's license was, because it was classified as a 
motorcycle under federal regulations, and was registered and insured as 
such. Some 300 Owosso Pulses were built before the company ceased 
production due to a lack of funding. 

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