Well, the S30 arrived yesterday and the designer of the crate that the bike is shipped in deserves a Nobel Prize. FedEx was pretty rough with the crate (I was convinced there would be damage) but the bike was completely unscathed. Assembly took about a half hour with me taking my time, watching the video, rewinding etc. I miscalculated my Xseam so the pedals were a bit too far for me. I brought them in to "6" on the boom and that is as far as it would go. This is not a bike for a errr....corpulent person, the space is relatively tight between the seat and bars. The cables just sit above my midsection (a work in progress).
Maiden voyage was today. I followed the videos (paddle, coast, legs out, pedal etc). I went to a local church a block away with a nice, gently graded parking lot. I'd never been there before and I noticed a LOT of cameras all over the property but no cars were there. I pulled in, unloaded the bike and started my paddling/coasting. I noticed the cameras were following my movement (the kind in the sphere suspended on poles). Well, after being there 6 or 7 minutes, the cavalry pulls in wanting to know what I'm doing etc. Once they realized I was only attempting to ride a bike and not desecrate their property they left me alone and went inside....While the cameras continued to follow me.
The hardest part for me honestly, was first getting my feet on the pedals. I tend to want to stick my knees out to the side as I pick my feet up to go on the pedals (right was worse than left). This forces me to have to focus on lifting my knees straight up. I was able to pedal in a semi-straight line, but turns are something else. I only had about 45 minutes today to practice before family obligations kicked in. I need to dial in the neck rest position and I REALLY need to work on my core and hip muscles.
Lessons learned:
That church has someone remotely monitoring the camera system
People have a hard time believing an adult is learning to ride a bicycle on a bright, sunny Saturday morning...regardless of design.
The MBB design requires a lot more finesse in the rider's inputs than a DF does, souplesse, if you will.
The videos CB puts out are an excellent resource not only for assembly, but learning to ride.
A QX100 might be an easier bike to learn on.
I need to lose weight
I need to figure out how to get the cranks a little bit closer to me, but at "6" there is no more room inside the slider.
Stronger core muscles and hip muscles will help with learning to ride.
I need to lose weight.
There is more of a learning curve than I anticipated but watching the videos and a large degree of humility kept me dropping the bike.
At one point when I had some semblance of control (and "control" is used loosely, meaning I didn't crash and was able to head in the general direction I had in my head) I heard myself chuckle out loud and say "This is FUN!".
Rain and snow tomorrow so I wanted to put the S30 on my trainer, but no dice. The trainer (Travel Trac Comp Fluid) uses a skewer designed to fit on the trainer's "pins". It is waaaaaaaaay too small to fit through the front end of the S30 and the CB skewers do not fit in the "pins" of the trainer. Suggestions?
Anyway it is going to be a fun learning experience, I just hope the weather holds out for safety's sake (I have no problem getting wet) and I can figure out this trainer fit issue.