National Bike Month: Draisines are the new fixies

via Boing Boing by Xeni Jardin on 5/1/12

Cycling Hipsters, if you were truly worth your ironic sideburns and artisanal grease stains, you'd abandon that fixie and mount one of these bad boys. The Smithsonian honors National Bike Month with a dive into the image archives for this photo, the forerunner of the modern bicycle: a draisine from around 1818. More about this "dandy horse," below.

In 1817, Karl Drais, a young inventor in Baden, Germany, designed and built a two-wheeled, wooden vehicle that was straddled and propelled by walking swiftly. Drais called it the laufmaschine or “running machine.”

A forester for the Grand Duke of Baden, Drais used his laufmaschine to inspect the Duke’s forest. The laufmaschine soon became a novelty among Europeans, who named it the “draisine.”

By 1818, the draisine craze reached the United States. Charles Wilson Peale, a well-known portrait artist, helped to popularize the draisine by displaying one in his museum in Philadelphia. Many American examples were made, and rentals and riding rinks became available in Eastern cities.

By 1820, the high cost of the vehicle, combined with its lack of practical value, limited its appeal and made it little more than an expensive toy. The two-wheeled vehicle would not become sustained until pedals were added in the late 1800s.

Donated to the Smithsonian in 1964, this draisine is the oldest cycle in its collection of 61 cycles. They reflect social trends and technological developments that have shaped the growth and popularity of riding since 1818.

Lots more wonderful old things like this in the Smithsonian's exhibition, "America on the Move." (thanks, Jessica Porter Sadeq)

Ultra-Tiny Camper Designed to Trail Your Two-Wheeled Ride

This is about as small and mobile as a ‘home’ gets, short of a tent you pack right on your back – a flip-out trailer dwelling made to be pulled behind a bicycle.

The  Midget Bushtrekka is a wee four-wheeled wonder that weighs 50 pounds – no light load – with 180 liters of storage space easily accessed regardless of configuration.

It is made for harsh road conditions: “By utilising two wheels under each side of the trailer, harnessed to a pivoting rocker frame, the trailer can easily absorb most of the uneven terrain in its environment. Additional to this, each set of wheels operates independently of the other, creating a clutter free underbelly on the trailer.

The unit is also flexible both for mobility and setup: “By adjusting the positioning of each pivot frame vertically, the ride height of the unit can be adjusted for bikes from 20″ up to 29″ … Our trailer also features fully adjustable levelling jacks to ensure no matter what terrain your setting up on, the unit can be presented to a horizontal position for sleeping comfort.”

Spherovelo: Curvy ride-on aims to improve toddlers' balance and motor skills

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We bet you can remember your first bike. We also bet it looked nothing like the Spherovelo - a sphere-based ride-on for children as young as one year old. Makers Early Rider, from Henley-on-Thames, UK, say the Spherovelo has been designed to improve your little one's balance and motor skills, making it the perfect pre-cursor to a "normal" balance bike... Continue Reading Spherovelo: Curvy ride-on aims to improve toddlers' balance and motor skills

Hornet velomobile comes with power boost included

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If you take a recumbent tricycle and enclose it in an aerodynamic fuselage, what you end up with is known as avelomobile. The vehicles are significantly faster than bicycles on the flats and downhills, plus they offer more weather protection, but they do tend to be heavy – this can make hill-climbing quite an ordeal. Some manufacturers compensate for this limitation by offering electric assist motors as optional extras, although these just add even more weight, along with boosting what is already often a pretty high price tag. Toronto-based BlueVelo, however, has taken an interesting approach with its new Hornet velomobile. It was designedaround its electric assist motor, which is included in the vehicle’s relatively low price... Continue Reading Hornet velomobile comes with power boost included

 

ADAPTRAC changes mountain bikes' tire pressure on the fly

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Like a lot of other factors involved in mountain biking, setting the air pressure of the tires is a matter of compromise. Keep them too soft, and you can’t go as fast as you’d like on smooth stretches of the trail – keep them too hard, and they’ll just bounce off of roots and rocks instead of gripping them. As it stands, most bikers go for a “Jack of all trades, master of none” setting, that allows for some traction and some speed. The folks at ADAPTRAC, however, apparently think that such a compromise shouldn’t have to be made. Their new system allows riders to inflate or deflate their tires as conditions dictate, while they’re riding... Continue ReadingADAPTRAC changes mountain bikes' tire pressure on the fly