kenhardwick
Well-Known Member
I was especially surprised to see this article on an "Australian" recumbent dealers' webpage....
http://www.flyingfurniture.com.au/info/front-wheel-drive-and-why-it-fails-stability-when-you-most-need-it-test
The following copied directly from webpage per the link above...
??Flying Furniture Cycles is Australia's most experienced recumbent retailer. We sell the broadest range of recumbent bikes and trikes in Australia AND we sell CHILD TRAILERS and touring and folding bikes too.
** Over 40 recumbent trikes and recumbent bikes to test all in one place right here **
Front wheel drive bikes?
Combine the pedal drive system and steering system in one unit and their you have it - all the chain angle and fast chain wear problems of a standard bike and extra bike stability problems too...
(Note that the long chain on a rear wheel drive recumbent does not go through any gear at an angle nor twist when you steer so that chain and drive components last much longer than on a FWD and much longer than a standard short chain on an upright bike).
The best rear wheel drive recumbents work just brilliantly so why do people even make front wheel drive bikes? Is it just marketing? Yes and no. Yes because you can make these FWD sound simple and sell them on that basis and no because well when you need to be inside the tiniest tiniest package of a full fairing it and/or you ride on a flat smooth dry and clean race track and you are a very very experienced rider you may be almost stable enough. Real world road riding is sometimes a lot trickier.
I've spoken to many home builders of front wheel drive bikes and now even some owners of commercially bought front wheel drive bikes - one thing they all have in common is the "unexpected fall"... it is the sort of thing that just happens out of the blue when they are least expecting it or in the worse case scenario when they are trying to take evasive action and steer out of the way of or around something. Steering grip and drive grip all on one small tyre front patch - it works ok on a FWD car where a little slip can happen and the car doesn't fall over but on a 2 wheeler? A little slip on a wet patch, sand, dirt, oil, or even a leaf and control is not easily regained.
One front wheel drive bike rider/owner even commented in the first 5 seconds of a test ride here on a Bacchetta bike that the Bacchetta was a hundred times easier to learn to ride than his commercially bought FWD bike. He bought a Bacchetta that day and sold his FWD soon after. But I guess at least they are a good and mostly cheap if heavy introduction to the comfort of a recumbent. Of course given the choice I'd never ride one when I could ride a beautifully stable and predictable rear wheel drive recumbent bike that is just as comfortable and in fact faster and lighter! All the recent "new" front wheel drive designs are just the same old designs as before surrounded by new hype / salesmanship...
We at Flying Furniture have ridden several front wheel drive bikes but we don't sell any. Given the above and the stability, safety and liability issues surrounding them would be just crazy to sell them or even recommend them. We don't.
Let me know if you have any other questions or need any further more specific information.
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Of course I would disagree....
http://www.flyingfurniture.com.au/info/front-wheel-drive-and-why-it-fails-stability-when-you-most-need-it-test
The following copied directly from webpage per the link above...
??Flying Furniture Cycles is Australia's most experienced recumbent retailer. We sell the broadest range of recumbent bikes and trikes in Australia AND we sell CHILD TRAILERS and touring and folding bikes too.
** Over 40 recumbent trikes and recumbent bikes to test all in one place right here **
Front wheel drive bikes?
Combine the pedal drive system and steering system in one unit and their you have it - all the chain angle and fast chain wear problems of a standard bike and extra bike stability problems too...
(Note that the long chain on a rear wheel drive recumbent does not go through any gear at an angle nor twist when you steer so that chain and drive components last much longer than on a FWD and much longer than a standard short chain on an upright bike).
The best rear wheel drive recumbents work just brilliantly so why do people even make front wheel drive bikes? Is it just marketing? Yes and no. Yes because you can make these FWD sound simple and sell them on that basis and no because well when you need to be inside the tiniest tiniest package of a full fairing it and/or you ride on a flat smooth dry and clean race track and you are a very very experienced rider you may be almost stable enough. Real world road riding is sometimes a lot trickier.
I've spoken to many home builders of front wheel drive bikes and now even some owners of commercially bought front wheel drive bikes - one thing they all have in common is the "unexpected fall"... it is the sort of thing that just happens out of the blue when they are least expecting it or in the worse case scenario when they are trying to take evasive action and steer out of the way of or around something. Steering grip and drive grip all on one small tyre front patch - it works ok on a FWD car where a little slip can happen and the car doesn't fall over but on a 2 wheeler? A little slip on a wet patch, sand, dirt, oil, or even a leaf and control is not easily regained.
One front wheel drive bike rider/owner even commented in the first 5 seconds of a test ride here on a Bacchetta bike that the Bacchetta was a hundred times easier to learn to ride than his commercially bought FWD bike. He bought a Bacchetta that day and sold his FWD soon after. But I guess at least they are a good and mostly cheap if heavy introduction to the comfort of a recumbent. Of course given the choice I'd never ride one when I could ride a beautifully stable and predictable rear wheel drive recumbent bike that is just as comfortable and in fact faster and lighter! All the recent "new" front wheel drive designs are just the same old designs as before surrounded by new hype / salesmanship...
We at Flying Furniture have ridden several front wheel drive bikes but we don't sell any. Given the above and the stability, safety and liability issues surrounding them would be just crazy to sell them or even recommend them. We don't.
Let me know if you have any other questions or need any further more specific information.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Of course I would disagree....