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-   -   How to choose indoor cycling machines? (http://www.cyclebanter.com/showthread.php?t=54815)

DT January 4th 04 05:40 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
What are the main considerations for selection of indoor cycling machines.
I see there are two main groups 1) flywheel type and 2) magnetic drive
types?

Thanks for your advice.



Jon Martin January 4th 04 09:29 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
DT was sufficiently re-animated to talk about How to choose indoor
cycling machines?
What are the main considerations for selection of indoor cycling machines.
I see there are two main groups 1) flywheel type and 2) magnetic drive
types?

Thanks for your advice.


all "turbo trainers" have a fly wheel (I stand to be corrected...), they
differ in the type of resistance provided.

1) fan - noisy but simple. A fan attached to the flywheel takes energy
to push through the air, making you work. Mostly non-adjustable for
effort.

2) magnetic. Quieter, works by magic (I can't see how the effort to pull
each set apart isn't mostly made up by their attraction to the next
set....), slightly uneven feel to the pedals (IMHO), usually adjustable
effort.

3) fluid. A fan encased in fluid. Quieter than fan in air and magnetic,
also smoother than mag, also more expensive. Adjustable ones available.

Personally, I use a non-adjustable fluid. After all, there's 21 gears on
my bike to make life easier and harder.

Then there's rollers, where you want the contact point (trainers that
run on the rims are available if you ride knobbly tyres), do you want
the front level off and the bike held on the trainer's frame (if you
have back-wheel only, you may want a block under the front tyre to level
the bike back up) computer monitoring and control..... as usual, how
much do you want to spend? Then get out, and try a few!

Cheers

Jon
--
Why does everything nice I buy at the moment keep @##*%ing breaking?
NOT!! nospam=defblade

Dave Kahn January 5th 04 02:48 AM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
On Sun, 4 Jan 2004 21:29:13 +0000, Jon Martin
wrote:

Then get out, and try a few!


Surely you mean stay in and try a few. :-)

--
Dave...

Simon Brooke January 6th 04 10:35 AM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
"DT" writes:

What are the main considerations for selection of indoor cycling machines.
I see there are two main groups 1) flywheel type and 2) magnetic drive
types?


I really can't see the point of static cycles, rowing machines, etc. I
mean, sitting in a room doing work to achieve nothing (or to make an
unpleasant noise) seems to me to be the epitome of pointlessness. If
you want exercise, get out on your bike and go somewhere.

--
(Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/
;; Sending your money to someone just because they've erected
;; a barrier of obscurity and secrets around the tools you
;; need to use your data does not help the economy or spur
;; innovation. - Waffle Iron Slashdot, June 16th, 2002

Tony Raven January 6th 04 11:48 AM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
Simon Brooke wrote:

I really can't see the point of static cycles, rowing machines, etc. I
mean, sitting in a room doing work to achieve nothing (or to make an
unpleasant noise) seems to me to be the epitome of pointlessness. If
you want exercise, get out on your bike and go somewhere.


Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his static
cycle. Sat there every night pedalling away and measuring his progress on a
map. A big excitement was when Turkey had a big earthquake a few days after
he had "virtually cycled" through it

Tony





Ian G Batten January 6th 04 11:50 AM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
In article ,
Tony Raven wrote:
Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his static
cycle.


I seem to recall that either Hess or Speer did something similar,
counting the laps of the Spandau exercise yard as they walked.

ian

W K January 6th 04 12:34 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 

"Tony Raven" wrote in message
...

Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his static
cycle. Sat there every night pedalling away and measuring his progress on

a
map. A big excitement was when Turkey had a big earthquake a few days

after
he had "virtually cycled" through it


Was that in Framley ?



Colin Blackburn January 6th 04 12:42 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
On Tue, 6 Jan 2004 12:34:47 +0000 (UTC), W K wrote:


"Tony Raven" wrote in message
...

Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his
static
cycle. Sat there every night pedalling away and measuring his progress
on

a
map. A big excitement was when Turkey had a big earthquake a few days

after
he had "virtually cycled" through it


Was that in Framley ?


I hope not. It's enough risking life and limb going through Framley on a
moving bike, a stationary bike would be almost certainly lethal.

Colin
--

Tony Raven January 6th 04 12:44 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
Ian G Batten wrote:
In article ,
Tony Raven wrote:
Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his static
cycle.


I seem to recall that either Hess or Speer did something similar,
counting the laps of the Spandau exercise yard as they walked.


He had the excuse though of not having another option.

Tony



Tony Raven January 6th 04 12:46 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
W K wrote:

Was that in Framley ?


Too wierd for the Framley and besides which it was real ;-)

Tony





Arthur Clune January 6th 04 01:24 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
Ian G Batten wrote:
: In article ,
: Tony Raven wrote:
: Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his static
: cycle.

: I seem to recall that either Hess or Speer did something similar,
: counting the laps of the Spandau exercise yard as they walked.

At least they had the good excuse of men with guns stopping them
just going for a ride!

Arthur

--
Arthur Clune http://www.clune.org
"Technolibertarians make a philosophy out of a personality defect"
- Paulina Borsook

Arthur Clune January 6th 04 01:26 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
Simon Brooke wrote:

: I really can't see the point of static cycles, rowing machines, etc. I

I have a turbo and use it sometimes. Basically I use it in one of
two circumstances between January and March only.

1) Icy weather. I still commute in icy weather mind since it's usually
ok in town

2) I want to train but only have a very short period of time. You can
do a decent session in 40 mins on a turbo. You can't do that on the
road.

This tends to mean I use it about once every two weeks for three months
of the year. Seems ok to me.

Arthur

--
Arthur Clune http://www.clune.org
"Technolibertarians make a philosophy out of a personality defect"
- Paulina Borsook

Peter B January 6th 04 06:11 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 

"Tony Raven" wrote in message
...

Does anyone remember that Essex teacher doing a "world tour" on his static
cycle.


I prefer to forget sad events ;-)

Pete



Jon Martin January 6th 04 09:14 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
Simon Brooke was sufficiently re-animated to talk about How to choose
indoor cycling machines?
"DT" writes:

What are the main considerations for selection of indoor cycling machines.
I see there are two main groups 1) flywheel type and 2) magnetic drive
types?


I really can't see the point of static cycles, rowing machines, etc. I
mean, sitting in a room doing work to achieve nothing (or to make an
unpleasant noise) seems to me to be the epitome of pointlessness. If
you want exercise, get out on your bike and go somewhere.

So your lungs don't react like mine, which fill up with lovely uccky
stuff if I try to cycle anything below 8-10'C.... With a trainer I can
start again late next spring with something in my legs;)

Cheers,
Jon

--
Why does everything nice I buy at the moment keep @##*%ing breaking?
NOT!! nospam=defblade

Just zis Guy, you know? January 6th 04 10:37 PM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
On Tue, 6 Jan 2004 21:14:13 +0000, Jon Martin
wrote:

So your lungs don't react like mine, which fill up with lovely uccky
stuff if I try to cycle anything below 8-10'C.


Mine do. I take salbutamol and keep riding.

Guy
===
May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting.
http://chapmancentral.demon.co.uk

Dave Larrington January 7th 04 09:55 AM

How to choose indoor cycling machines?
 
Simon Brooke wrote:

I really can't see the point of static cycles, rowing machines, etc. I
mean, sitting in a room doing work to achieve nothing (or to make an
unpleasant noise) seems to me to be the epitome of pointlessness. If
you want exercise, get out on your bike and go somewhere.


When it's dark, when it's raining, when there's ice or snow on the ground,
when it's several miles to the edge of town, when you want to ride your race
bike for training purposes but can't take it anywhere on the road as it has
no provision for lights, mudguards or carrying anything as useful as a
toolkit, pump, jacket, keys, money, etc. etc. Plus you can listen to
rock'n'roll at brain-melting volume without having to worrry about not
hearing the approaching bus.

It's still boring, though.

--

Dave Larrington - http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/
================================================== =========
Editor - British Human Power Club Newsletter
http://www.bhpc.org.uk/
================================================== =========




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