INTO THE RIDE #12
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Designing the Ultimate Racing
Recumbent
by Randy Schlitter
The
response to Into the Ride #11 was outstanding. It demonstrates there
is a real hunger in the recumbent riding community for organized
racing. If a new
organization comes into existence, let us all hope it stays true to
the cause, unlike what happened with the UCI. Like it or not the UCI
still has the potential to greatly affect the mainstream success of
the recumbent bicycle. We have seen in the bike itself mature into a
very refined machine, but still lacking in universal acceptance. It is this lack of reception that makes this veteran
recumbent maker feel much effort has been in vain. Such staunch
resistant to new ideas is usually based on a severe lack of
information. Had the founding fathers of UCI really been advocates
of cycling this stigma never would exist. However our job is not to
fret over the past, instead let?s go onto bigger and better
things. In our case directly, we will strive to develop the hardware
in the hopes of realizing either UCI forming a serious and real
respect for recumbents. This respect will manifest itself in the
formation and promotion of a recumbent racing class.
The
job will not be easy. The recumbent bicycle is not defined by one
configuration. At present there is at least two major forms, short
and long wheelbase. Each of these split into even more forms and
deviations. The variety that attracts amplifies the task of building
a racing organization into a seriously complex job.
It
goes beyond the simple stating of the law. Just deciding what would
be ?legal ? to race would be so broad to include all forms that
participates would cry foul when a one configuration seemed
advantaged over the other. I
would say in this case let the chips fall. Let them all race against
each other in an open recumbent class. Sure maybe restrict fairings,
but even letting them be used could result in some interesting
developments.
With
this free for all concept what does and does not work will some be
found out. I would bet over a very short period of time the melting
down process would begin. The end result; the bikes start looking
identical. It happens in every racing sport, the hardware takes on
subtle difference, one configuration reigns. Without some sort of
common ground in designs, mass appeal and an effective racing
organization will be many times less successful.
It
is not clear at this time if we are truly ready. The thought has
crossed my mind more than once, that recumbent racing has a long
road, pun intended, ahead. There
are maybe years of informal racing, sporadic attempts to organize,
all along the way to the true ultimate definition of the
design.
Meanwhile
we are always working on the next generation. To give you a little
insight about this process, this is how I break out recumbent
design. When considering a new design I work off of 7 major
variables:
1.
Bottom bracket height
2.
Seat height
3.
Wheel base
4.
Steering system
5.
Wheel size
6.
Frame material
7.
Aerodynamics
The
independent and co-dependant relations of all 7 variables determine
the success of the bike, provided the goal is clear. If the intent
is to race, it could mean a very narrow margin for some variables
and wider on others. But even the type of race plays a big part;
road racing is the specific event here.
The
environment of road racing forces the hand of practicality to the
point item 7 is first to slide, then 6 is not far behind. Part of
being practical is being affordable, and useable. A fully faired
bike might be impressive on flat runs, but hills, curves, crosswinds
and weather could turn that advantage away. Cost is important to keep within reason, and frame material
plays into this big time. At a reasonable cost there will be more
people participating, which accelerates the sport on the whole.
5
is critical to from the start. Wheel size defines the frame
geometry. There are strong opinions as to what combination is best,
but in the end commonality serves the road racer best. That almost
means dual wheel sizes. What size of the wheels ties into 1,2 and 3. I tell my staff when it comes to frame design, the dots are
where the crank, seat, bars and wheels are, how we connect them
gives our design distinction, or geometry. I purposely refrained
from listing frame geometry, it is not one of the seven design
variables it is the
design! That is what 1 to 7 are conspiring to be is a bike frame,
from which all else emits. Any manner of variance will occur with
the frame, through changes in wheels, seats, bars, and other bolt on
items, but the frame locks in the bikes genetics.
6
kills us on choices concerning cost, manufacture ease, and
performance. This is no easy place to be, for no perfect material
exists. Titanium is touted as nearly the perfect material. I will
have to agree it is impressive both in performance and price. No
doubt we will use it for future bikes, but only if it has true merit
and not market buzz. Our aluminum V2 Formula is so close to the
bulls eye that going to Ti will result in a different ride feel,
that may or may not justify the added cost, when one considers the
small to no difference it weight. Carbon looks fun, and practical
bikes made from it are already on the market, but good old fashion
steel, is and most likely will continue to be the mainstay material
for frames.
Designing
the ultimate recumbent is a process that begins with the statement
of the bikes design goal, keeping it obtainable is 100% of being
realistic on stating that goal. As we move toward bikes that we hope
will bring in larger number of riders, keep in mind that goal will
mean trade offs. Just like the common diamond frame road bike has
made trade offs in areas like comfort and aerodynamics, so must the
road racing recumbent. It is up to us as a collective whole of users
and inventors to define what trade-offs are acceptable. |