Post by zen cyclePost by AMuziOn Fri, 28 Feb 2025 15:36:28 -0600, AMuzi
Post by AMuziOn Fri, 28 Feb 2025 11:31:08 -0600, AMuzi
Post by AMuziPost by cyclintomPost by Frank KrygowskiSorry to hear that. I was riding over lumpy wet ice
in a gravel parking
lot yesterday. I was very conscious that falls can
now have much worse
consequences than they once did.
But I think it's still important to keep giving
ourselves reasonable
challenges, to maintain skill and agility.
I expect that your old steel touring bike is more apt
for conditions like thqat than Andrew's higher
performqance bike.
Wheelbase, tire width, tread or rider position would
make no
difference leaning into a turn over ice.
I suspect that riding a Catrike on ice would be really
fun.
--
C'est bon
Soloman
+1
Very different from a two-wheeler!
Very diferent indeed. Tell me that you weren't out riding
your fixie
on icy roads. Riding a fixie seems risky enough without
any ice.
--
C'est bon
Soloman
Fixed gear is not any more safe nor unsafe than coasters.
Some (I for one) feel they offer better rider control.
This may be perceptual.
Others note that pedaling through fast turns can be a
problem. (then again I have never had a pedal strike on
mine over decades)
It's all a matter of Skills, Experience, and Testicular
Fortitude (SETF).
Safer.....I don't think so, especially if riding in areas
where panic stops may be necessary. You can stop a lot
faster and with more control with brakes than you can by
just back pedaling a fixed-gear.
More control imo is a matter of SETF and not related to the
machine being ridden to any great extent, panic braking
issues notwithstanding.
Fixed-gear machines have a few notable challenges that free-
    Road hazards - A free-wheel is easy to bunny hop over
stuff, a fixed-gear, notsomuch, for the simple reason that
as long as the bike is moving your legs have to be moving
meaning you have to be able to lift the bike while your legs
are moving. Of course it can be done, but it's very
challenging and takes a great deal of coordination. I've
seen it done, I can't do. I've had the experience of
catching a frost heave on a downhill while spinning well
over 100 rpm. The first instinct when your bike leaves the
ground is to stop pedaling - Do that on a fixed gear and the
bike will land at whatever speed you were traveling with
your legs not moving. It never took me down, but I've seen
it happen.
    Downhills -
"let me tell you brother
it doesn't mean a thing
if you don't have
the ability to spin"*.
Spinning your legs at cadences over 130 take a bit of
practice. If you don't have brakes installed you can leg
brake, but that too is a challenge at higher cadences. This
leads back to the stability and control issue. Inexperienced
riders will start bouncing in the saddle since they don't
have the smooth pedal stroke. Picture this: A fixed-gear on
a steep downhill, the rider pedaling so fast the rear wheel
isn't maintaining contact with the road, the road has a turn
which the rider has never even though about on his road
bike. No, it wasn't me.
    Corners - You _MUST_ pedal though corners. Lean too
much and you strike a pedal, the rear wheel leaves the
ground and you go down (not necessarily, but likely). Back
pedal to scrub off speed and you risk breaking traction, you
go down (no only likely, but necessarily).
I've ridden a fixed gear consistently for almost 40 years
now as my cycling mentors were old school guys who preached
it as an off season training tool. I've done 3- 4 hour
sessions on the road, commuted, done a smattering of track
racing, and I do the local club TT a couple of times a year
on it. A number of years ago a local shop was doing matched
spring roller races I competed in every week for a few
years(if you couldn't spin 170 you weren't shit).
I love the bike. I finally bought a used track bike rather
than use the rentals. My goal this year is to use the track
bike on the Major Taylor Hill Climb https://
www.majortaylorassociation.org/events/georgestreet24.shtml.
http://youtu.be/bZdoKxKgHZs
admonish other fixed gear riders to use one.
+1 on bunny hops at speed. Virtually impossible on fixed but
common, even trivial, on a road bike.
And my hat's off to you regarding rpm. I generally spin