Thanks for the reply. I think for many reasons, I would have to pass. This bar seems like an April Fool's joke.
Thanks for the reply. I think for many reasons, I would have to pass. This bar seems like an April Fool's joke.
DT
http://www.mjolnircycles.com/
Some are born to move the world to live their fantasies...
"the fun outweighs the suck, and the suck hasn't killed me yet." -- chasea
"Sometimes, as good as it feels to speak out, silence is the only way to rise above the morass. The high road is generally a quiet route." -- echelon_john
If I liked popcorn I would be popping some right now.
How about some photos/video of someone riding this in order to see the position(s) of a rider.
Brian McLaughlin
The bike i own with the longest wheelbase is a turd. Long wheelbases make bikes turdy. yeah, ive read the linked thread. i still dont get it without riding it, and then id probably hate it
Matt Zilliox
I think I'll go talk to the Jerk first...or Garro, or Winter Cycles, or Chapman Cycles...well, just about anybody else.
My innovative idea is to mount a hi-rise stem backwards so it points back at me. While I'm at it, I think I'll rotate my drop bars 180 degrees so that they point forwards. Then I will put flashlights in the bar ends. Damn, I'm full of good ideas.
Jason Babcock
You realise you guys all sounds pretty much like flat-earth believers ? Good for you if you were in a majority to feel right for centuries. I'm not saying Peter's proposal is the right tool for the job, I have seriously no idea and I'm pretty content of my current gravel bike, but I would have at least to try it before judging.
Working in the IT field, I'm quite accustomed to witness resistance to change and how bad it affects evolution, innovation and the user experience as a whole. People keep using broken by design operating systems and softwares, use really crappy processes, work around oddities and errors instead of choosing better tools just because it is what they learnt to use years ago.
Without any tinkerers and innovators in the industry you would still be riding penny-farthing with that kind of mindset.
Last edited by sk_tle; 06-25-2019 at 01:25 PM.
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T h o m a s
These comments are just pile-ons. Jeez. What if the thing rides great?
I'd like to ride it before commenting.
Mountain Bike geo has changed to a new paradigm, it's not so much that the wheelbase is longer, it's the front center
gets you there a different way.
There are people experimenting, i don't think PVD is the only one doing this, as i can see about 20 prototype frames
in our office that look very similar. There are a lot of bike engineers doing this.
-g
EPOst hoc ergo propter hoc
I think the bike and the bar are interesting - He's working out a new approach, and I'm happy to read about it.
It's not his ideas. It's his presentation.
I've never found any success winning others to my point of view with the opening statement that everyone but me is an idiot.
But hey - according to PVD, since I am part of the group consisting of everyone in the world but him, I'm an idiot. So, y'know, maybe I'm wrong.
Of course, according to PVD you're part of the same group as me!
GO!
yes and no
short stays feel bad descending really steep stuff on long front center bikes
in my experience (and having talked to others) extending the rear center a bit while also increasing the front center makes for a very lively ride
my naked's chainstays go from about 425-450mm, and at places like Mt Benson in Nanaimo (very steep big bike territory) lengthening the rear end helps keep the bike feeling balanced
Sam @ naked has found similar things, and is playing with some of his designs as a result
my concern with these designs (and I am not a frame designer by any means) is that by keeping the rear end so tight and the front so shoved out you are going to be experiencing varying grip while seated cornering due to weight imbalances. My MTB corners great, but it is not really designed to be cornered with the seat up. Gravel bikes are, and I wonder if the weight you apply seated can stay well balanced through choppy corners
I'd love to try it
That's why the mountain bike seat tube angle has been changed, modern geo bikes are steeper.
It's all interconnected, where the wheels are, and where you sit.
On a gravel bike, a dropper post (with no offset) effectively moves the saddle forward 2.5 degrees, (1 inch)
so the rear end may look short, but you're not sitting that far back.
-g
EPOst hoc ergo propter hoc
Nah
Seat tube is for climbing
With the dropper down sta doesn’t matter. If you run super short stays and a long front end the bike is out of whack descending very steep terrain with the body position changes that dictates
You lean further forward going downhill on the new bikes, and the lengthened chain stays help keep you balanced in that new position. 420 stays and shorter were for the frames of yesteryear
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