H Riders,
I'm looking for feedback from riders who are new to the Cruzbike experience that haven't ridden a bent before.
Hi, Rick!
Alright, the V1 Cruzbike Sofrider in my garage is the first recumbent I've owned and ridden.
Mostly for comparison from upright to bent and riding experience.
For whatever reason, I cannot sit on any standard upright diamond-frame bicycle for longer than 20 minutes.
I recently attempted a 30 minute workout on a heavily-padded (non-recumbent) stationary bike, in a gym.
I endured extreme discomfort toward the end of the workout and abandoned the effort after only 20 minutes.
I prefer the upright bikes, because that's what my reflexes are trained for.
My body tells me that those days are long over: my Cruzbike has, for me, all-day, day after day comfort.
Comfort factor comparison to an upright particularly on a familiar ride.
There is no comparison.
(See above.)
Learning curve.
The learning curve was pretty steep and is ongoing, for me.
(I'm still learning how to pedal, hands-free.)
But...I'm old, in my fifties, so I'm teaching an old dog this new trick.
Also, add in the fact that I used to test-ride motorcycles for a living and you'll see
that I have a lot of normal rear-wheel drive single-track hard-wired reflexes
to contend with.
On the positive side, in my case, I'm way too brave concerning anything to do with two wheels.
Handling on downhill twisty roads (important).
Very neutral and responsive.
The steering, until you become acclimated to it, is very heavy and slow.
This is because of all the added mass associated with the front wheel:
your legs, the boom, the drivetrain and the other Cruzbike-specific front-wheel drive bits.
The Cruzbike, like an early 70's Yamaha TZ250 racebike I had the pleasure to try,
is best steered by leaning the bike...as opposed to just relying on the handlebars for
steering.
With the bottom-bracket up high, out of the way, insane (for a bicycle)
lean angles are possible.
Practice steering, starting, stopping, riding and pedaling far away from traffic!
If you have ridden a bent before how does/do they compare.
This is the only recumbent bicycle I've ever even sat on.
I imagine that the drivetrain efficiency is better than the average
rear-wheel drive recumbent, due to both the rigid front-end and the short chain.
I'm awaiting the delivery of a Sofrider v2 and feeling a little apprehensive.
I hope you end up enjoying it half as much as I enjoy mine.
:mrgreen:
Hope this helped,
Steve