Bikemania '92

by Ian Feldman <ianf@ihpva.org>

                                                            __o
                                                           -\<,
             . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . O/ O

Reasons? Does one need a reason to travel?
Still, I had a few.  Brace yourself.

In September of 1992 I set out on a month- long rail journey through Europe with the goal of learning about recumbent bicycles, and about bicycle technology in general. Earlier that year, and no small thanks to Steve Roberts' bike- nomadic lifestyle, I became smitten with an idea of a "lawnchair bike" and could not wait to possess one of my own. Unfortunately, where I live in Stockholm, Sweden, there just aren't any recumbents to be seen, much less to test- ride and/ or acquire outright. I think I saw one of these "strange" bikes in town before, but not very recently. So first I attempted to discover where I could find some such recu- bikes  to test- ride and learn about.
    I scanned the  rec.bicycles.*  discussion groups on the Usenet for the "recumbent" keyword, then wrote to the first person, who mentioned them in print. This just happened to be none other than Jobst Brandt, a known hardcore  Diamond Frames Are Forever  fundamentalist and a sworn recumbent enemy (or, should we say, "El Denigrator"?). He was not too fond to have been taken for a recumbent enthusiast, I can tell you that much ;-)) ! Talk about starting at the wrong end! Still, I perservered. . .

Fortunately, soon thereafter I discovered Torsten Lif on the net (who, by the way, turned out to have been the opponent of Brandt in that very exchange), a fellow Stockholmer and an owner of a  Linear  recumbent. What was less fortunate was, that I could not test- ride his bike because of a sizeable height difference between us. . .  one of us is clearly vertically- challenged  (in relation to the other, not otherwise), and recumbents are much more icky than upright bikes in respect to the correct leg inseam size; the bike must fit the rider. But a week or so later I managed to cross paths with a local Roulandt (a Dutch LWB [long- wheelbase] recumbent), one of the first models ever built in Europe, and do a couple of shaky laps on it in a parking lot during a Bicycle Day event.
    Then I learned of Mats Nilsson's existence, a recumbent enthusiast in Umeå, a town near the Arctic Circle, owner of 5 different recumbents of for me more- suitable size, and made arrangements to visit him a month later. In the meantime I browsed through stacks of old bicycle magazines, wrote the IHPVA, and generally tried to gain as much knowledge about them as possible. The research stage.

Up to that point I was convinced that the Dutch  Flevobike,  by the looks of it the most technologically advanced  of the more- compact SWB [short- wheelbase] lot, was the one for me. Reality soon taught me otherwise: as I was not able to ride Mats'  Flevo  at all, I had to go back to square one, start looking for some other cure to my gallopping   r e c u m b e n t l e s s n e s s.

Then I found out, that the next bike, that had striken my fancy --a Counterpoint Presto SWB made in Seattle, WA (USA)-- was available to order only, and there was an 8 to 10 weeks waiting list for it. That translated to 12+ weeks with shipping, nearly the end of the bike season here. It also transpired, that the basic ~US$2100 Presto, no fancy components or anything like that, would cost me in excess of $3000 including shipping, customs and the local 25% VAT. That was a lot of money to be spending it sight unseen, especially knowing that, of the only two SWBs that I had seen to date, Mats Nilsson's Lightning P-38 and the FlevoBike, I was not too comfortable on the first and could not ride the second.

So I decided to spend some of it on a recumbent fact- finding tour instead, go where recumbents flock in the Fall before rolling off for the winter (Africa? Hawaii?), the European Human Power Vehicles Championships event, which in 1992 was held in Münich, Germany. And to combine that with a visit to IFMA (International Fahrrad und Motorrad Ausstellung), one of three or so major European bicycle trade fairs, in Cologne later the same month. In between these two events, and no small thanks to the hospitality of fellow HOSPEX members, and a  net.penpal  or two, I arranged to visit several other places in Europe.


I had a month's Interrail pass, a bidon full of water, a catchy name for the tour, and I was wearing prescription glasses.  Hit the road!


a w3eb by  r a n d o m design .  feedback ? index 28 Feb 1997