Greetings fellow recumbent riders. I’ve been riding Bacchetta bikes for years and have been on a CA2 since 2011.
I’ve done brevets up to 1200’s but they were always an exercise in sleep deprivation for me. I was not fast, not slow but I was consistent. I gave those up and other than riding a couple of times a week, I usually just ride our Sat. club rides.
I can usually hang very well with our club riders. The average of the faster group, with our multitude of traffic rights is usually 19-20 but we’re rolling in the low 20’s. There’s another group I ride with that rolls in the 23-25-27 and I rarely, if ever, get dropped. It takes a lot of effort though.
I understand the V20 is probably faster and better suited for hills. My only concern is the change in dynamics from a rear-wheel drive that doesn’t overly impact steering to a front-wheel drive where you’re pedaling and steering the same wheel.
I’m comfortable on my CA2 in group situations. Starting, stopping, sprinting after others after a traffic light change, all comfortable. How comfortable are you V20 riders on group rides? Once you adjusted to it, is it easy to maintain control while riding with others? Is the learning curve manageable? Is it manageable from a dead stop while sprinting to catch others? The second group’s starts are always jackrabbit starts and that’s when I hit the most power - trying to catch them.
How’s your V20 in similar situations? Thanks for any input and comments!
I’ve done brevets up to 1200’s but they were always an exercise in sleep deprivation for me. I was not fast, not slow but I was consistent. I gave those up and other than riding a couple of times a week, I usually just ride our Sat. club rides.
I can usually hang very well with our club riders. The average of the faster group, with our multitude of traffic rights is usually 19-20 but we’re rolling in the low 20’s. There’s another group I ride with that rolls in the 23-25-27 and I rarely, if ever, get dropped. It takes a lot of effort though.
I understand the V20 is probably faster and better suited for hills. My only concern is the change in dynamics from a rear-wheel drive that doesn’t overly impact steering to a front-wheel drive where you’re pedaling and steering the same wheel.
I’m comfortable on my CA2 in group situations. Starting, stopping, sprinting after others after a traffic light change, all comfortable. How comfortable are you V20 riders on group rides? Once you adjusted to it, is it easy to maintain control while riding with others? Is the learning curve manageable? Is it manageable from a dead stop while sprinting to catch others? The second group’s starts are always jackrabbit starts and that’s when I hit the most power - trying to catch them.
How’s your V20 in similar situations? Thanks for any input and comments!