StudEbiker said:
Nice video there Reid. I keep intending to do a video, but I haven't got around to it yet. Nice bike. I saw one parked at the local library this week. I really didn't understand what the bike was about until watching this video. Cool idea, but if you want to electrify this ride you are pretty much locked into a cyclone/rc drive type set up right. You have to have that front hub for the transmission to work and obviously there would be no way to put a rear hub motor on it and keep the 3-spd hub.
Hi, Stud. Thank you for the undeserved compliment. At least I can ad-lib...and...
warning:
You have no idea how much I like to say, "Hi, stud!"

Especially when the "victim" is thousands of miles
from my glass jaw...ka POW!
Anyway, back to reality, because that above was nothing but a joke. You have to put up with me, like Rodney
dangerfield:
LOOK, STD,

the hub dynamo is thi
s MODEL T BIKE's power supply,
because to shift any kind of transmission of any sort of mechanism, requires a small amount of power.
YOU know this, STD, but not all readers are veterans or mechanics or pro bikers, etc.
A family
could buy a LIME, and hang it in the garage for twenty years, and when they next ride it: it will shift
because there's no battery, propietary, or "Duracell" alkaline-type, to ever die, nor to leak corrosive electrolyte.
LIME is just like Model T in this respect:
its power system will always work, even a century from now; the hub magneto is incapable of failure, or wearing out, period.
THE NEXT WAVE, coming soon:
electrically shifted high-end high performance road, race, trail bikes of any sort of gearing technology.
POINT:
they will shift by use of a small, probably lithium, battery, (my guess, go read the Shimano information on the web, various forums?) I speak to the general readers; am not lecturing STD's (ha ha, r. is a clown and clowns are scary!!! VD RISK)
Pro riders are astounded by what this SHIMANO CONCEPT does for them. LIME, though, is the first for the consumer market;
it is like...Model T.
The bikes to come, and TREK will lead, with Shimano doing the engineering, will be VERY SMART in how and when they shift. It's a no-brainer. And if you, dear readers, ever drive an automatic transmission car in traffic whilst thinking of other things, you appreciate
how nice it is going to be to just RIDE a bike, instead of having the bike "ride" you.
Electric-drive for this bike? Could be done, but I think I will never do that. I'd have to install a small battery and have circuitry to raise and lower the voltage depending on front or rear wheel speed (think: a spoke magnet and a helping-engineering hand from Justin, maker/inventor of the Cycle Analist.
That is, I =could= but an eZee front motor wheel to this bike, and it would still be automatic, by a simple voltage tapping of the big battery, adjustable to my shift-point likes, all automatic.
Yep. The bike will be ridden more now; I had to wait almost two weeks for the Hanks to arrive, and had the front wheel magneto apart to learn just how simple and beautifully made that unit is. POINT: an automatically shifting bike does not need a hub magneto.
BUT, the beauty of this is: it is so clean, so simple and, it may well operate just as new, even if it were stored away for fifty years.
It is a collectable for the next owner. Me? I won't outlive the LIME. But it is making my dreary life very much better, cheerful, and gives joy that I cannot get from a plain old manual-shift three speeder...you know, I like gadgets that are actually useful!
And too, the bike will go through paces and miles and I will learn of any weak points in the automatic shifting system/execution,
and report here. Remember, this is as significant to the bike world, in its way, as were the first safety bikes of ca. 1889.
It is such a privilege to be one of the first bikers to have such a revolutionary, NEW WAY to bike! And yeah, I could electric-wheel it, for sure! But, for now, and probably forever, I am going to say to myself, K.I.S.S.
Because I am a bit slow on the uptake, you know? (not really, I just like to clown when I am happy)
It was a bad day. That's why the video shakes. But the bike was now just put back to service after being "down" for technical inspection.
The light was right, the bike shifted perfectly as before I took apart the magneto. I did not ride down the street, but only around the courtyard. It's going to be my mental-uplift and mild-exercise bike. People will see it, and I will have a blast telling them about this exciting new thing, first quantum leap in bike technology in 120 years. The next wave is coming, of automatic shifting, soon!
So if you want a complex-geared bike and front braking, and SNAPPY, smart, smooth shifting, you shall have it, guys, pretty soon!
PS: I like, but do not like, the cyclone concept: mechanically not ideal, too much chain and extra fugly parts, and you cannot drive it through deep water. The LIME =could= be dunked and live just fine. Not so with a cyclone-type, as we see those ebikes today.
Never brief, except when I'm in my underwear, and
thanks,
StudEbiker, for giving me your perfectly sounded thoughts, and thanks
for looking at this amateur's shaky video of
a very trim, light, soundly engineered bike.
It is a guy's bike, not a
foo-foo girly thing.
It is masculine, and that's why I got it: it looks
all-bike,
no wicker basket or flowers on fenders for me, though
John in CR likes that kind of bike (jk).
Kind regards, respectful regards, truly, always,
Reid