ratz
Wielder of the Rubber Mallet
Yep Larry I do believe you are on the key points. And Charles is correct it's a very personal thing as even you pedaling style is going to influence your preference.
I think it comes down to Length of thigh versus femur and the angle that you like your foot at.
A vertical pointed toe brings the knee further forward; and a toe pointed forward is going to bring the knee back. I tend to point my toes forward and I notice in the videos; that Larry has his toe vertical. So even if we where twins we might like different crank lengths.
Physically if your femur is long or your thighs are short you will probably favor shorter cranks and if your femur is short or the thing is long then longer cranks. In the very end the Length your crank will dictate home much "throw" forward and back you have in your hips. The longer the crank the more potential throw as it goes threw the rotations as your femur thigh combination have to move from the max forward and leeward positions. Lots of throw makes pedaling uncomfortable and inefficient; if you don't change the crank length; then the only way to fix too much "outbound motion" which is basically not ridable is to pull the BB closer which we all know then gives too much knee bend and by by knees if you push hard.
Now if it wasn't so expensive to experiment with different crank lengths. Too bad there 's no profit is making a more sophisticated version of this: http://www.recumbents.com/wisil/misc/crank_angle.asp
I think it comes down to Length of thigh versus femur and the angle that you like your foot at.
A vertical pointed toe brings the knee further forward; and a toe pointed forward is going to bring the knee back. I tend to point my toes forward and I notice in the videos; that Larry has his toe vertical. So even if we where twins we might like different crank lengths.
Physically if your femur is long or your thighs are short you will probably favor shorter cranks and if your femur is short or the thing is long then longer cranks. In the very end the Length your crank will dictate home much "throw" forward and back you have in your hips. The longer the crank the more potential throw as it goes threw the rotations as your femur thigh combination have to move from the max forward and leeward positions. Lots of throw makes pedaling uncomfortable and inefficient; if you don't change the crank length; then the only way to fix too much "outbound motion" which is basically not ridable is to pull the BB closer which we all know then gives too much knee bend and by by knees if you push hard.
Now if it wasn't so expensive to experiment with different crank lengths. Too bad there 's no profit is making a more sophisticated version of this: http://www.recumbents.com/wisil/misc/crank_angle.asp