phavoc said:Libris said:Without a faring of some sort 200kph is about the maximum you could handle but with clever aerodynamics it would be quite possible to get a lot more out of it; it's all about diverting the airflow around the rider and diffusing the base drag. 300kph? Easy. Modern street legal road bikes can get to that (just) and they have the added disadvantage of actually having to stay on the road.
That's true. Diverting the inbound airflow around the pilot provides for some protection. And that's when you'll start getting negative air pressure on the backside of your fairing, which will also cause pull on the driver/rider, though in a different direction. The faster you go, the more the negative pressure. It won't be nearly the same impact as forward-facing pressure, but it will be strong nonetheless, and if you provide air bleed inside that will get sucked out too.
Depending on how you design it, the less aerodynamic it becomes the more power you need to apply, and the stronger the materials need to become, which changes the flow and you have to start over again. With lots of power and super-strong materials you can overcome a lot. But at some point you no longer have a crotch rocket, you have a nearly fully encapsulated craft. So you might as well fully encapsulate it and gain much more speed and protection for the occupants.
But crotch rockets are all about feeling the air whipping in your face and laughing at the danger of riding something so fast with so little protection. Only wussies are gonna go with full protection!
All we need to get our TL-more-than-now Grav Bikes zipping along at 500kph without these aerodynamics issues is to install some sort of handwavium overthruster to compensate. Probably gets its mojo from the grav plates or something. And quantum flux. That is involved too. Look, I'm no physics expert, but I see guys flying these things at 500kph all the time out my starship viewport, and they are under control and not getting sucked out.