Re: Urban cycling update

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Sujet : Re: Urban cycling update
De : am (at) *nospam* yellowjersey.org (AMuzi)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.tech
Date : 29. Sep 2024, 17:53:39
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Yellow Jersey, Ltd.
Message-ID : <vdbt62$1q3e9$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 9/28/2024 5:30 PM, Roger Merriman wrote:
AMuzi <am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
On 9/28/2024 2:52 PM, Shadow wrote:
On Sat, 28 Sep 2024 14:09:33 -0500, Mark J cleary
<mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
>
On 9/28/2024 1:44 PM, AMuzi wrote:
On 9/28/2024 1:09 PM, Shadow wrote:
On Sat, 28 Sep 2024 09:34:28 -0500, AMuzi <am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
>
https://nypost.com/2024/09/27/lifestyle/nyc-bike-messengers-reveal-their-surprisingly-busiest-time-of-year/
>
     All bikes shown have thick chains, ***no gears(maybe hub gears on
one) and no apparent brakes. Hub brakes by back pedaling?
>
<https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/09/victor-ramirez-credit-sammpicnyc-instagram-90397651.jpg>
     []'s
>
Right, primarily fixed gear.
>
>
I crazy dangerous job that I expect some people have no trouble taking.
Not me that would be crazy. Also, having road a bike for most of my life
and many miles I have never road a fixed great bike. Does this mean you
are either pedaling for not? The hub must not be a freehub or cassette.
In my world I have no idea how anyone could ride a bike like that, seems
incredibly dangerous. Do they use cleats and what is basic speed your
are going?
>
The way I see it, if the chain breaks you lose both the
ability to accelerate out of trouble (as with most bikes) but also the
ability to brake.
Imagine spinning those pedals down a steep slope then some
debris strikes your chain and "derails" it.
[]'s
>
*** by "no gears" I meant no gear changing. Obviously there
must be at least one gear.
>
In practice fixed gear chain is not only wider and stronger
but since it only runs in one path (like a cam chain in an
engine) derailment is unheard of.
>
That said, most urban fixed riders use a front brake, as do
I. The younger crowd will comment, "I can stop in three
meters!" which is fine until you have two meters between you
and the bus.
>
Was a case few years back, in London with a lad who unfortunately hit and
killed a woman than bus with a fixed without a front brake (illegal in uk
law) and that essentially among other things got him convicted.
 Roger Merriman
 
+1
Classic negligence or reckless disregard or whatever the statutory term is over there.
--
Andrew Muzi
am@yellowjersey.org
Open every day since 1 April, 1971

Date Sujet#  Auteur
28 Sep 24 * Urban cycling update19AMuzi
28 Sep 24 +* Re: Urban cycling update17Shadow
28 Sep 24 i`* Re: Urban cycling update16AMuzi
28 Sep 24 i `* Re: Urban cycling update15Mark J cleary
28 Sep 24 i  +* Re: Urban cycling update7Shadow
28 Sep 24 i  i+* Re: Urban cycling update2Catrike Ryder
28 Sep 24 i  ii`- Re: Urban cycling update1AMuzi
28 Sep 24 i  i`* Re: Urban cycling update4AMuzi
28 Sep 24 i  i +- Re: Urban cycling update1Ted Heise
29 Sep 24 i  i +- Re: Urban cycling update1John B.
29 Sep 24 i  i `- Re: Urban cycling update1AMuzi
30 Sep 24 i  `* Re: Urban cycling update7Zen Cycle
30 Sep 24 i   +* Re: Urban cycling update2AMuzi
30 Sep 24 i   i`- Re: Urban cycling update1Zen Cycle
30 Sep 24 i   `* Re: Urban cycling update4Ted Heise
30 Sep 24 i    +* Re: Urban cycling update2AMuzi
30 Sep 24 i    i`- Re: Urban cycling update1Frank Krygowski
30 Sep 24 i    `- Re: Urban cycling update1Zen Cycle
29 Sep 24 `- Re: Urban cycling update1John B.

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