When you sit in your Silvio, the stem is pointing right at you, and is really quite high--so high that I wonder what would happen in a front-end crash. If one crashed into a pretty solid object like a car or tree at some moderate or higher speed, your arms wouldn't have enough strength to hold your body on the seat, and your body would come forward. It would seem inevitable that you'd get the stem right into your sternum, or even more scarily, into your neck. On many "conventional" recumbents, the handlebars are lower, and are positioned so the stem is in front of, and about even with, the knees. That seems safer to me. I wonder if, with a different handlebar design, something similar could be done with the Silvio? By eliminating the front-tube extension and adjuster to which the stem presently mounts, some weight could perhaps be saved as well. I'd be interested to hear what Jim Parker thinks given that he's a physician.
Thanks to all, and happy Cruzing!
Thanks to all, and happy Cruzing!