billyk
Guru
In my ongoing quest to become "one with the bicycle", I'm learning to ride my Quest 2.0 no-hands. It's surprisingly easy. I'm not a daredevil or a showoff (anyway, I'm too old for girls who'd be impressed with that kind of thing). I just want to feel completely in control of the bike.
I have about 1500 miles on my Quest. Although I've ridden recumbents for 15 years and many thousands of miles, this is the first one I can ride without hands. So far I can confidently go at least 1/4 mile (400m), make shallow turns, and keep a pretty straight track. But only with a very steady cadence and constant pressure on the pedals. It's actually easier up a slight incline for that reason. I can't control it at all without pedalling, in fact I have no idea what to do with my feet in that situation.
* Anyone else trying this? Any hints? Can you keep control without pedal pressure?
* And for the Cruzbike designers: The trickiest part of riding without hands is controlling the swoops. It feels like once the front end starts to turn it wants to flop over. As long I keep the front wheel closely in line with the frame it's very rideable, but a too-hard push with one foot and it is gone. Have you tested any designs with more trail, that presumably would be stabilizing?
An easy experiment would be to put a smaller wheel on the back (which would increase the trail and decrease the head angle) and seeing if it gets easier to ride no-hands. I will try this when I get a chance and report back. Suggestions?
BK
I have about 1500 miles on my Quest. Although I've ridden recumbents for 15 years and many thousands of miles, this is the first one I can ride without hands. So far I can confidently go at least 1/4 mile (400m), make shallow turns, and keep a pretty straight track. But only with a very steady cadence and constant pressure on the pedals. It's actually easier up a slight incline for that reason. I can't control it at all without pedalling, in fact I have no idea what to do with my feet in that situation.
* Anyone else trying this? Any hints? Can you keep control without pedal pressure?
* And for the Cruzbike designers: The trickiest part of riding without hands is controlling the swoops. It feels like once the front end starts to turn it wants to flop over. As long I keep the front wheel closely in line with the frame it's very rideable, but a too-hard push with one foot and it is gone. Have you tested any designs with more trail, that presumably would be stabilizing?
An easy experiment would be to put a smaller wheel on the back (which would increase the trail and decrease the head angle) and seeing if it gets easier to ride no-hands. I will try this when I get a chance and report back. Suggestions?
BK