RojoRacing
Donut Powered Wise-guy
So I have a world class DF rider(think faster than me) who sees what I do on the Vendetta and wonders if he could reach the same level of mastery of the speed sled. His reluctance stems from a past experience where he borrowed a Schlitter recumbent for 2 weeks and failed to ever feel comfortable or safe in that time so he gave it back. If think you know who I'm talking about I ask you keep it to yourself, I won't be mentioning any names and I ask you to respect that.
Today he sent me this message
Hi Jason, about the Cruz bike - how much different is it to Schlitter Encore bike? I am asking because I had that one for a couple of weeks, but just couldn't get the hang of it... it was damn right scary for me to ride that thing. I did it only on the parking lots for safety reasons, but going faster than 20mph was just a struggle, not physically but I was scared of speed. Just not comfortable for me...
I guess I should take longer, but I didn't see the point as I enjoy the classic bike so much. So I thanked John and returned it in crisp condition (as good as new).
My response was
I can't say personally as I've only ridden a Schlitter around a parking lot for 5 mins and I was very unstable on it. That was not the bikes fault, I just wasn't used to it and it handled totally different than my cruzbike. Learning to ride a cruzbike or any other recumbent is not something you do if you are thinking "I'll just try this quick and see if it's better". If that is your thought process you'll never figure it out because your expectations will block your progress. You need to want to really want to learn the bike in your mind and understand each struggle is something you have to master and not just something impossible because it's different. When I first got my cruzbike I struggled more then anyone else because I didn't read and practice the beginner drill and I was rushing to get ready for the first Berrego Spring 24hr back in 2015.
The first day it was impossible but on the second day I got rolling and was wobbly a lot. I was most comfortable pushing the pedals hard and accelerating but as soon as I eased up on the pedals to go slow I was fighting the bike to stay stable. Day 3 to day 12 I rode on a 8km closed road back and forth practicing relaxing and riding with one hand. day 13 I did my first group ride with friends without problem so I started riding with another faster group so I could just follow them and practice getting faster. I only had the bike 5-6 weeks before I raced berrego but by that point I felt good on the bike. Now the cruzbike is my favorite bike if I want to be comfortable and just go fast.
Lets not turn this into a Schlitter vs Cruzbike discussion. He obviously trust issues with the former and that's a mental hurdle I wont ask him to jump right now. I'm only trying to give him the honest info so he can feel more comfortable about undertaking a new trial of a recumbent. For you die hard cruzbike doubters or supporters of Schlitter I ask you to keep in mind any top level DF rider trying any kind of bent is a win in the bent world. With that said are there any other points you think I should mention besides the obvious stuff he already knows about like comfort and he need to keep an open mind and practice the drills. I'm tempted to send him a link to my thread where I posted my experiences those weeks leading up to the race because it has a ton of great info about what he can expect. The only problem is I didn't sugar coat what I wrote, I only wrote about the unfiltered truth as I went so the Parkers may want to hang me the next time them visit california. I'd rather have someone tell me up front how hard something was to learn while showing me how easy it can be instead of me having my high expectation crushed with the learning curve and losing hope. http://cruzbike.com/forum/threads/the-road-to-500-miles-in-24hrs.8915/
Today he sent me this message
Hi Jason, about the Cruz bike - how much different is it to Schlitter Encore bike? I am asking because I had that one for a couple of weeks, but just couldn't get the hang of it... it was damn right scary for me to ride that thing. I did it only on the parking lots for safety reasons, but going faster than 20mph was just a struggle, not physically but I was scared of speed. Just not comfortable for me...
I guess I should take longer, but I didn't see the point as I enjoy the classic bike so much. So I thanked John and returned it in crisp condition (as good as new).
My response was
I can't say personally as I've only ridden a Schlitter around a parking lot for 5 mins and I was very unstable on it. That was not the bikes fault, I just wasn't used to it and it handled totally different than my cruzbike. Learning to ride a cruzbike or any other recumbent is not something you do if you are thinking "I'll just try this quick and see if it's better". If that is your thought process you'll never figure it out because your expectations will block your progress. You need to want to really want to learn the bike in your mind and understand each struggle is something you have to master and not just something impossible because it's different. When I first got my cruzbike I struggled more then anyone else because I didn't read and practice the beginner drill and I was rushing to get ready for the first Berrego Spring 24hr back in 2015.
The first day it was impossible but on the second day I got rolling and was wobbly a lot. I was most comfortable pushing the pedals hard and accelerating but as soon as I eased up on the pedals to go slow I was fighting the bike to stay stable. Day 3 to day 12 I rode on a 8km closed road back and forth practicing relaxing and riding with one hand. day 13 I did my first group ride with friends without problem so I started riding with another faster group so I could just follow them and practice getting faster. I only had the bike 5-6 weeks before I raced berrego but by that point I felt good on the bike. Now the cruzbike is my favorite bike if I want to be comfortable and just go fast.
Lets not turn this into a Schlitter vs Cruzbike discussion. He obviously trust issues with the former and that's a mental hurdle I wont ask him to jump right now. I'm only trying to give him the honest info so he can feel more comfortable about undertaking a new trial of a recumbent. For you die hard cruzbike doubters or supporters of Schlitter I ask you to keep in mind any top level DF rider trying any kind of bent is a win in the bent world. With that said are there any other points you think I should mention besides the obvious stuff he already knows about like comfort and he need to keep an open mind and practice the drills. I'm tempted to send him a link to my thread where I posted my experiences those weeks leading up to the race because it has a ton of great info about what he can expect. The only problem is I didn't sugar coat what I wrote, I only wrote about the unfiltered truth as I went so the Parkers may want to hang me the next time them visit california. I'd rather have someone tell me up front how hard something was to learn while showing me how easy it can be instead of me having my high expectation crushed with the learning curve and losing hope. http://cruzbike.com/forum/threads/the-road-to-500-miles-in-24hrs.8915/