T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3060.1 | Auto-Bike - the answer to ALL your problems | COOKIE::MUNNS | dave | Mon Apr 01 1996 12:26 | 22 |
| It's 3:30 AM and the 7 month old needs to be tranquilized. I use a
bottle and the TV to do this. What's on ? Info-mercials.
The one we watched was the Auto-Bike product. Automatic, 6 speed
transmission. The sales pitch was slick. A coat & tie dressed man
says, '6 speeds is plenty', as his eyes shift to the left (a sure sign
of a blatant lie). A competitive mtb-er runs the Auto-bike through
muddy trails and then comments, 'The rims aren't bent, the tires and
brakes work'. An apparent bike shop owner, 'loves Auto-bike for
the simplicity'. A bike designer 'raves about the quality' as he
hammers the frame on a work bench. A bike messenger says, 'it shifts
for you so you can keep your eyes on the road'. A student 'likes the
big, springy seat'. An elderly man 'hates to decide on what gear to
use'.
On and on it goes, '4 payments of $89.99 plus $49.95 shipping'.
I have also seen the Auto-bike for sale in the JC Penney's catalog. It
weighs-in at about 45 lbs. Of course the TV add does not mention this.
Forgive me for not including the phone number so you can order your
Auto-bike today. If you have absolutely nothing to do at 3 AM, scan
the channels for some entertaining propaganda. ;)
|
3060.2 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't get even ... get odd!! | Mon Apr 01 1996 13:05 | 6 |
|
45 pounds!!
I figured it'd be heavy, but I never imagined it'd be THAT
heavy.
|
3060.4 | | FABSIX::JO_BARTER | | Mon Apr 01 1996 21:32 | 2 |
| April Fools right?
|
3060.5 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Tue Apr 02 1996 07:17 | 6 |
| -1 Unfortunately not. However, every bike does serve someone a purpose
somewhere. I certainly wouldn't recommend anyone toward this
product.
Re; the poor guy worrying about which gear to go in... Sounds like
he need therapy.
|
3060.6 | I've seen one! | RANGER::WASSER | John A. Wasser | Tue Apr 23 1996 15:53 | 45 |
|
Visit beautiful Worcester, MA and see one LIVE at the Herman's
store at the Greendale Mall.
Here is what the mechanism looks like
A plastic casting is clamped to the hub by the
gear cluster. That casting has three arms that
extend out about 6 inches (clearing the large
cluster gear by several inches). Each arm extends
a few inches into the wheel (between the spokes)
and has a hole for a shaft parallel to the wheel
axle. A circular plastic plate with a large
central hole and three rods sticking out the back
fits over the gear cluster and slides into the
three holes in the arms. The deraileur has a
shoe that clips over the edge of the circular plate.
The shifting is done by weighted levers pressing
in on the ends of the three rods.
The shifting mechanism itself would only weigh a couple of
pounds and that could be reduced by using airfoils instead
of weights to measure rotational velocity. The mechanism
could be added to most any spoked-wheel deraileur bike.
Here is how it works:
As the rear wheel speed increases the weights
apply tension to the levers...
The levers apply pressure to the rods....
The rods move the plastic plate out over the gear cluster...
The deraileur riding on the edge of the plate moves the
chain...
The system shifts up.
As speed decreases the spring tension in the
deraileur moves everything back.
One problem I would expect is getting smooth shifts when
you don't have either indexing (at least none that I could
see) or direct control of deraileur position.
|
3060.7 | | UHUH::LUCIA | http://asaab.zko.dec.com/~lucia/biography.html | Tue Apr 23 1996 18:15 | 8 |
| I saw it advertised in the Macy's add this weekend. The copy included things
like "wide padded seat" (or springy, cushioned, something like that) and "great
exercise".
So, when I want to hammer up a hill, it will pick the right gear for me to
hammer in, will it?
Tim
|
3060.8 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Form feed = <ctrl>v <ctrl>l | Tue Apr 23 1996 18:40 | 6 |
|
As long as the gear you're looking for is between 1 and 6, then
yes, it will.
If you want gear 1.4, you have to settle for gear 1 or gear 2.
|
3060.9 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Apr 24 1996 06:56 | 22 |
| The bicycle will not pick the gear you want. Nor can it possibly
discern between a riders ability/strength.
This bicycle does have a usefull purpose for those folks who are
casual/weekend riders. Serious or competitive riders need not apply.
I saw the infomercial (well, bit and pieces through some channel
surfing). The "testimonies" of the people were pretty funny, e.g.
shifting is confusing, I don't have to worry about what gear I'm
in, I don't have to shift the bike, blah, blah, blah...
The there was the "competition" staged to show that the bike was
better/faster in different types of terrain. Just as funny as the
testimonies.
There are so many variables involved with the efficiency of a bicycle
as well as the "bike to human" interface. Funny how they avoided all
that.
Chip
|
3060.10 | one of the big lies?? | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | on the point | Wed Apr 24 1996 09:02 | 3 |
| I believe that the thoughts around "one size fits all" apply here.
rich
|
3060.11 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:58 | 3 |
| -1 Abso-tively! :-)
Chip
|
3060.12 | check out this cadence | SSDEVO::EDMONDS | Diane | Fri Jun 14 1996 16:19 | 6 |
| Just saw an article in the Denver Post about the Autobike.
The part the made me really wince is: it keeps your cadence
at a constant *65 rpm*.
Ouch! Too low for me!
|
3060.13 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | DCU Board of Directors Candidate | Fri Jun 14 1996 17:20 | 5 |
| re: .12
Too low for anyone, except the target market of the bike:-(
Bob
|