RojoRacing
Donut Powered Wise-guy
Just scratching the surface of what we can do but this is probably the greatest amount of exposure bents have officially gotten on a noteworthy media outlet.
like it and reply to it.
Yes.... I read the other day that Mike has written a book about Recumbent bikes... knowing that he is such a great enthusiast it's probably a good idea to buy it.Mike Burrows
Other than incorrectly saying lower CG of bents makes them more stable, what else did they get wrong? incomplete analysis? Yes.
There was more stuff said that was completely wrong but even more important was the stuff sold at face value when the statement is very open-ended and based on rider skill.
The two most frequent questions I get asked are 1. is it harder to climb with? this is probably because the only time I stop long enough for people to inquire about the bike is after some 4000 foot climb. 2. how well does it handle going downhill
Without my own personal experience, I'd have to pull my response from what I see in the bent community and I'd have so say it performs rather weak on both fronts, this is because I've never seen anyone else besides myself do ether with any sort of noteworthy success. I'm still wait for the day the next bent rider shows up to a mountain race and finishes in the podium spots or another bent rider taking KOM's from the Pro peloton on technical DH's instead of arrow straight stretches. So I always have to choose my words carefully because it is true that the potential is there to do both, but like driving a formula 1 car, just because it can go fast doesn't mean everyone who tries will be able too. We need more than one outlier doing the impossible before people start to believe the impossible is possible.
Imagine if the GCN segment included a race up a 20 min climb between say myself and one of the presenters. I'm sure we could even convince them to make it exciting and make both bikes weight the same to show how the position doesn't rob much of anything from the power to climb. Showing the bikes ability to descend could be a bit tricky to catch on camera but it could be done.
The whole reason manufacturers make race cars and bikes is to draw in customers of a performance driven product. Unfortunately bents can’t race on a world stage and still to this day the few times we try and sneak in a result it’s quickly swept under the rug by the governing body. One problem is bents only have a 1-2 stand out performances a year if even that so it’s easy to forget them. If we had say 20 stand out performances a years then it would become harder for people to ignore.
I guess it's a matter of perception. The presenters' comments were a rehash of "things they'd heard" about recumbents, with no personal experience, and (to me) they seemed slightly puzzled as to why someone would want to ride a recumbent, given all those cons to offset the few pros. One of the guys did seem more receptive to trying 'bents than the other. I'd call it overall neutral rather than favorable.I thought the GCN piece was overall favorable to bents and that they seemed to want to ride more of them.
As best I can tell, neither of the guys talking about recumbents (Ollie and Jon?) was the one who tried out recumbents (James) at the HPV event. Their expert was more than a bit...um, effusive...with the "smiling" thing.Their expert said they would smiling by the end of the day, which clearly was not the case. They were riding all wobbly all over the place.