A few days ago
raquel

who invented the recumbent bicycle and where can i find info on the inventor?

who invented the recumbent bicycle and where can i find info on the inventor?

Top 4 Answers
A few days ago
Anonymous

Favorite Answer

Try Wikipedia…It’s one of my favorite sites!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recumbent_bicycle

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A few days ago
whizitincognito
Who invented the recumbent bicycle and where can i find info on the inventor?
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A few days ago
red_eye_chimera
I agree with levineks. try Wiki. I use it to get my info for my reports and use. I’m Sorry that I didn’t answer the question, but I don’t know that.
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A few days ago
Frosty
History

Recumbent bicycle designs date back to the middle of the 19th century. A couple were patented around 1900 but the early designs were unsuccessful.

Early recumbents

Recumbent designs of both prone and supine varieties can be traced back to the earliest days of the bicycle. Before the shape of the bicycle settled down following Starley’s safety bicycle, there was a good deal of experimentation with various arrangements, and this included designs which might be considered recumbent. Although these dated back to the 1860s the first recorded illustration of a recumbent considered as a separate class of bicycle is considered to be in the magazine Fliegende Blätter of September 10 1893. This year also saw what is considered the first genuine recumbent, the Fautenil Vélociped. Patent applications for a number of recumbent designs exist in the late years of the 19th Century, and there were discussions in the cycling press of the relative merits of different layouts. The Challand designs of 1897 and the American Brown of 1901 are both recognisable as forerunners of today’s recumbents.

[edit] Mochet’s Velocar

A crucial story in the history of recumbent cycling began with the design of a four-wheeled pedal-propelled car called the ‘Velocar’ (or ‘Vélo couché’) built in the early 1930s by French inventor and light car builder Charles Mochet. Velocars sold well to French buyers who could not afford a motor car, possibly because of a poor economy just after World War I. The four-wheeled Velocars were fast but didn’t corner well at high speed. Mochet then experimented with a three-wheel design and finally settled on a two-wheel design.

To demonstrate the speed of his recumbent bicycle, Mochet convinced cyclist Francis Faure, a Category 2 racer, to ride it in races. Faure was highly successful, defeating many of Europe’s top cyclists both on the track and in road races, and setting new world records at short distances. Another cyclist, Paul Morand, won the Paris-Limoges race in 1933 on one of Mochet’s recumbents.

Then on 7 July 1933 at a Paris velodrome, Faure rode a Velocar 45.055 km (27.9 miles) in one hour, smashing an almost 20-year-old hour record held by Oscar Egg. Since the one-hour record was one of the most important in all of cycling, that accomplishment attracted a great deal of attention. Less than two months later, on 29 August 1933, Maurice Richard, riding an upright bicycle, also bettered Egg’s one-hour record.

When the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) met in February, 1934, manufacturers of upright bicycles lobbied to have Faure’s one-hour record declared invalid. On 1 April 1934, the UCI published a new definition of a racing bicycle that specified how high the bottom bracket could be above the ground, how far it could be in front of the seat and how close it could be to the front wheel. The new definition effectively banned recumbents from UCI events and guaranteed that upright bicycles would not have to compete against recumbents. For all intents and purposes, the ban is still in effect.

After the decision, Faure continued to race, and consistently beat, upright bicycles with the ‘illegal’ (according to the UCI) Velocar.

In 1938 Faure and Mochet’s son, Georges, began adding fairings to the Velocar in hopes of bettering the world record of one hour for a bicycle with aerodynamic components. On 5 March 1938, Faure rode a faired Velocar 50.537 kilometers in an hour and became the first cyclist to travel more than 50 kilometers in an hour without the aid of a pace vehicle.

The UCI ban on recumbent bicycles and other aerodynamic improvements virtually stopped development of recumbents for four decades. Although recumbent designs continued to crop up over the years they were mainly the work of lone enthusiasts and numbers remained insignificant until the 1970s.

[edit] 1970s resurgence

While developments had been made in this fallow period by Paul Rinkowski and others, the fathers of the modern recumbent movement are usually said to be Chester Kyle and particularly David Gordon Wilson of MIT, two engineers working in the USA. Kyle and his students had been experimenting with fairings for upright bicycles, also banned by the UCI, leading in 1974 to the International Human Power speed Championship, from which the IHPVA grew.

The Avatar 2000, a LWB bike very much like the current Easy Racers products, arrived in 1979, and is often considered the first modern production recumbent. It was featured in the 1983 film Brainstorm, ridden by Christopher Walken, and in the popular cycling reference Richard’s Bicycle Book by Richard Ballantine. The oil crises of the 1970s sparked a resurgence in cycling coincident with the arrival of these “new” designs. Since competition was not a driving force, the UCI ruling did not hinder the commercial development of recumbent designs. The influence of Kyle and Wilson and their students probably also had a lot to do with the strength of this renaissance. This era also spawned an adaptation of the recumbent called the Rowbike. Created by Rollerblades inventor Scott Olson, the Rowbike is a hybrid of a recumbent bicycle and an indoor rowing machine.

A parallel but somewhat separate scene grew up in Europe, with the first European human power championships being held in 1983. The European scene was more dominated by competition than was the US, with the result that European bikes are more likely to be low SWB machines, while LWB are much more popular in the US (although there have been some notable European LWB bikes, such as the Peer Gynt).

[edit] Recumbents in the 1980s

In 1984 Linear recumbents (of Iowa) began producing what was at the time arguably one of the most comfortable and relaxing bicycles available. Their stability, handling, comfortable seat and natural arm position made them a relaxing form of transportation, recreation and exercise. One rider, returning from their first test ride said, “If my butt had wheels this is what it would be like!”

Linear ownership has changed hands since the 80’s. In 2002 Linear Manufacturing’s assets were bought by Bicycle Man LLCand moved to New York. Since then owner Peter Stull has been working with senior engineering students at Alfred University Alfred University, local engineers and machinists utilizing available technology including computer FEA testing to improve their Recumbent Bikes and bring an old favorite into the new century.

Two short-wheelbase recumbents in an amateur HPV raceIn the UK in the 1980s the most publicised recumbent cycle in the UK was the delta configuration, sometime electrically powered Sinclair C5. Although sold as an “electric car”, the C5 would be more accurately characterised as a recumbent tricycle with electrical assistance, with all the associated advantages and disadvantages.

[edit] Recumbents in the 2000s

A number of recumbent manufacturers went out of business after the 1990s, including BikeE and Vision.

Popular models in the 2000s include recumbents by Challenge Bikes, Optima, Bacchetta, RANS, Easy Racers, Lightning, Linear recumbents, HP Velotechnik, and Volae.

The high racer designs of Bacchetta and Volae have become particularly popular[citation needed], since they combine the safety of being highly visible in traffic[citation needed] with the performance of a nearly fully reclined position and ultra light and performant components.

In 2006, Cruzbike became the first manufacturer to commercialise the Tom Traylor originated configuration for front wheel drive moving bottom bracket with a product that provided a seat height similar to a high racer but with a lower crank height. This approach erased many of the riding difficulties of the center-steered variations[citation needed] produced by European Flevobike company in the 1980s.

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