Monday, July 16, 2007

Eugene Happenings

The other day our local video/dvd rental shop closed. They had been in business for 24 years specializing in art, foreign and independent films. They were one of the special things about the neighborhood we live in. They will be missed but will live on through the library which is buying up 10,000 titles from their great collection.

On the other side of the coin we discovered the coolest coffee in the world which actually opened last December. This is the coffee shop run by the same local roasters that roast the coffee we drink at home. They are called Wandering Goat. This coffee shop is so vegan friendly that it costs extra for dairy milk and not for soy, rice and any of the other non-dairy options (every other coffee shop I've ever been to charges extra for soy.) As well all of the treats are vegan. We love the location and it has a great atmosphere. Nothing like riding our bike over there for an iced soy mocha.

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Friday, October 20, 2006

PictoBrowser: My Bicycle

PictoBrowser let's you create Flickr slideshows. It's great, but because Flickr can be slow, this can lag a bit when loading. To create one of these for your website, click the little "info" link on the lower right. Here is one showing my fixed gear bicycle:

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Monday, September 04, 2006

My Fixed Gear Bicycle

This is my fixed gear bicycle and I love it.

My Redline 925

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Monday, August 07, 2006

More on bicycle brakes

Sheldon Brown is an uber bicycle geek and a foremost expert in fixed gear bikes. With all this talk about fixed gear and braking, Sheldon has chimed in with an article. His conclusion is that learning to use a front brake properly is the best technique for stopping and that brakeless fixies are a bad idea.

Here is an excerpt from the entire article:


Conventional Wisdom

Conventional wisdom says to use both brakes at the same time. This is probably good advice for beginners, who have not yet learned to use their brakes skillfully, but if you don't graduate past this stage, you will never be able to stop as short safely as a cyclist who has learned to use the front brake by itself.

Maximum Deceleration--Panic Stops


The fastest that you can stop any bike of normal wheelbase is to apply the front brake so hard that the rear wheel is just about to lift off the ground. In this situation, the rear brake cannot contribute to stopping power, since it has no traction.


A Fixed Gear Bicycle

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Saturday, August 05, 2006

Fixed Gear Law

There was a recent case in Portland, Oregon of a fixed gear rider (messenger) getting a ticket for not having brakes on her bike. I personally ride a fixed gear but I have front and rear brakes. The case came down to a discussion about brakes.

Here is an article from Cycling News talking about the physics of it.

Fixies outlawed?

By John Stevenson

There's been a bit of hoo-ha in various bike forums around the net in the last few days about a case in Portland, Oregon where a rider was fined for not having a separate brake on her fixed-gear bike. According to bikeportland.org, bike messenger Ayla Holland was ticketed on June 1 and charged with violating Oregon Revised Statute (ORS) 815.280(2)(a) which states:

A bicycle must be equipped with a brake that enables the operator to make the braked wheels skid on dry, level, clean pavement. strong enough to skid tire.

Ms Holland's lawyer Mark Ginsberg attempted to argue that a fixie's transmission constituted a brake. The judge was having none of it, and in his decision said:

"The brake must be a device separate from the musculature of the rider. Take me for instance. I don't have leg muscles as strong as a messenger… how would I stop safely?"

This has led to some rather alarmist talk about the future of fixies. "Will the cops now feel emboldened to go out and ticket everyone on a fixed-gear? Are fixed-gears now essentially illegal? Are fixed-gears truly a public safety hazard?" asks Jonathan Maus in bikeportland.org.

Well, no. The issue here is a badly-written piece of legislation being interpreted by a judge so that it achieves its aims, rather than what the absolute letter of the law says.

A fixed-gear bike with no brakes cannot stop in as short a space as one with a front brake, because only the rear wheel is providing the braking force. As a vehicle on the road, it's therefore clearly less safe.

This is a matter of simple physics. In the third edition of Bicycling Science, David Gordon Wilson demonstrates that the maximum deceleration of a crouched rider on a standard bike (that is, not a recumbent) on a dry road is 0.56g. Try to brake any harder than that and you go over the handlebars, which is the limit condition, as the limit from tyre adhesion of vehicles that don't pitch over (tandems, recumbents and cars) is about 0.8g.

If you brake with only the rear wheel, according to Wilson, the limit is 0.256g, because braking effectively shifts your weight forward, reducing the load on the rear wheel to the point that it skids at that deceleration. Once a tyre is skidding, its braking effectiveness is reduced because you no longer have sticky solid rubber in contact with the road, but a lubricating layer of molten rubber. (Which incidentally demonstrates that the Oregon legislation was written by someone with no clue at all about bikes.)

Therefore, however good a fixie rider is, stopping distance is roughly doubled without a front brake. In practice, it's probably more than that.

In some jurisdictions, better-written laws make this issue moot. In the UK, for example, the law requires a bike to have two independent braking systems. I used to ride a fixie in the winter in the UK, and I knew quite a few fixie riders who dispensed with a rear brake on the grounds that the transmission was a braking system, but I never met anyone daft enough to have just a rear brake.

This judge has clearly decided to ignore the letter of the law in favour of enforcing its obvious intent, that bikes have at least one maximally effective brake. That's the sort of thing judges are handy for: turning idiotically badly-written legislation into rules that make sense in the real world.

All that fixie riders have to do to conform is slap on a front brake; hardly rocket surgery, and a long way from fixies being suddenly illegal. And to fixie riders who are about to reach for the email to defend riding brakeless fixies, I refer you to Cmdr Montgomery Scott: "You canna change the laws of physics!"

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Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Bikely

Bikely is a social networking site that focuses on sharing bicycle route information around the world. What a great idea. Right now there are no Eugene Oregon routes. I think I might have to add some.

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