that's the one. when you think it thru, it makes total sense that it works, but when you see it in action, it just looks wrong.

thanks for the link, bB.






On Jan 13, 2008 5:05 PM, An Undercover Cop < undercovercop@riseup.net> wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

veganboyjosh@gmail.com wrote:
| just get a loose sprocket or chainwheel that's larger than the cog,
and that
| filles out the chain somewhere between the cog and the chainwheel. the
chain
| would then not go in a straight line from bottom of CW to bottom of
FW, and
| vice versa, but from bottom of CW to bottom of floating chainwheel, to
| bottom of freewheel; from top of FW to top of floating chainwheel, to
top of
| chainwheel.  hard to put into words, but if you can figure it out, it
works
| awesomely. at first, it seems like it wouldn't work, or it would require a
| specific number of teeth in order not to walk to the front or the
rear, but
| the truth is that the chain is moving forward (at the top of the loop)
just
| as fast/many links as it is moving backwards (at the bottom of the loop.)

from wikipedia's entry on "fixed-gear bicycles":

~    * A "Ghost" or "floating" chainring. An additional chainring placed
in the drive train between the driving chainring and sprocket. The top
of the chain moves it forward at the same speed that the bottom of the
chain moves it backwards, giving the appearance that it is floating in
the chain.

i'm pretty sure i know the tallbike you're talking about, josh, but i
can't seem to find the photo, either.  but the marvelous atomic zombie
provides us with this:

http://www.instructables.com/files/deriv/F5W/VGOF/B01ES9J3YPJ/F5WVGOFB01ES9J3YPJ.MEDIUM.jpg

leave it to the freak bikers to invent the problem *and* the solution,
then export it to the rest of the world!

- -bB
chiBikeProject
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux)

iD8DBQFHiqc7SfGaTCxqHXERAj4bAJ0Td8twy/+DEB8sZmHSrMPhpfWknQCeLAcA
GXJcP7uORnWHCpEpEllR07c=
=/UHg
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----