Dreamslide, a Seatless Bike That You Surf

Meet the Dreamslide. No, it’s not a helter-skelter down which you slip, only to find yourself in school, and naked, and maybe able to fly, although it’s more like swimming through the air than flying. No, the Dreamslide is in fact an almost equally weird, and very cool, alternative to the bike.

The Dreamslide has two big differences from a regular bike. First, it has no seat and second, it has a new kind of crank which makes it possible to stand up and pedal without dying after like five minutes.

The stand-up part is that part that the Dreamslide people are pushing, billing the machine as a cross between cycling and skateboarding or, better, longboarding. You pedal to gain speed and then you can cruise and lean into bends as if you were carving a board. It actually looks like a lot of fun.

But the really interesting part is in the crank. If you ever rode home without a saddle, you’ll know how hard it is to keep pedaling whilst holding your weight on your legs, especially if you’re not climbing a hill. If you ever tried that on a fixed-gear bike, you’ll know that it is virtually impossible to go more than a few hundred yards.

The Dreamslide’s crank, called the APS (Adaptive Pedaling System) gets around this by having two independent crank-arms. At any time, the rear crank moves upwards around three times faster than the front crank descends.

This apparently gives a motion a lot more like running, and as you can see, it lets you rest your whole weight on the lower leg as the top foot comes over the top of the circle. Those oversized pedals also help you take your weight on your legs.

The Dreamslide also folds, although as it has no seat or accompanying tubing all you need to do is swing the steering-tube down flat against the frame, where it clamps in place with a big magnet.

You can actually buy this crazy vehicle, and although it costs more than a Brompton and a longboard combined, it’s less than some sports gear, at €1,250, or $1,730 in your Earth dollars.

Like any sport, it even has its own uniform which, in this case, can only be described as “preppy”: To ride the Dreamslide you are obligated to wear a polo-shirt and tight flannel work-pants. Groovy!

Dreamslide product page [Dreamslide via Bike Snob]


The Stemie: Bike-Pad Protects Your Family’s Future

The Stemie isn’t going to stop you crying if you slip off your saddle and take a metal whack to the baby-maker, but it might just make the bruises a little less severe. The oddly-spelled accessory is simply a silicone-rubber ball with a strap that slips over and secures to your bike-stem.

You have to be riding your bike in a rather odd fashion, or have some very bad luck, to actually hit your more sensitive parts on the sharp aluminum elbow of the handlebar stem, but its pretty easy to bash a thigh if you’re using your bike for anything more dangerous than commuting. Mountain-bikers, BMX-ers and bike polo players are all aware of the risks. This last – polo-players – are especially vulnerable as they’ll often use old road bikes with an angled quill-stem instead of the squared-off clamp-on stems seen elsewhere.

The Stemie weighs 60-grams (2.1-ounces), comes in an array of eye-burning colors and costs $19 – a small price to pay for the continuation of your bloodline.

Stemie product page [Stemie via Bike Snob]

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Suntour Swing Shock: Suspension Fork for Road Bikes and ‘Fixies’

Suntour’s Swing Shock is a swing-arm suspension fork that is clean-looking enough to put on a fixed-gear bike, however fancy it might be. The fork comes in two parts. The alloy top section is joined to the lower, magnesium forks by a pivot that juts out behind the fork, just under the down-tube. A piston and coil-spring sit vertically between these two parts and give 30mm, or just over an inch of travel to soak up cobblestones, curbs and small potholes.

The straight fork has an ingeniously simple design that doesn’t look out of place on an otherwise stripped down bike. The one you see here has mounts for a disk-brake, but you can also opt for V-brake/cantilever bosses.

Normally I’m not a fan of suspension, except where it’s needed: on mountain bikes. I prefer the mechanical simplicity of slightly fatter tires at lower pressure, and a sprung saddle because there’s less to go wrong. This Suntour fork, though, looks simple enough and pretty enough to consider.

The forks are up on the Suntour site right now, but pricing and dealer availability details are not.

Suntour Swing Shock [Suntour via Bicycle Design]

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Electric Bike Runs (Almost) on Water

SiGNa’s fuel-cell powered electric bike will run for 60 miles on a single charge. More impressive is that it runs on water.

The bike itself is really just a showcase for the fuel-cell tech from the energy company. The cells uses sodium silicide in the form of a sand-like powder. Add this to water and it “instantly creates hydrogen gas.” This hydrogen is then used to generate electricity. Because no hydrogen is stored, the cells are safe, and excess electricity is stored in batteries for an extra boost when you get to a hill. The cartridges are hot-swappable and are fully recyclable.

The main advantage (apart from the safety aspect) is that you can just swap-in a new cartridge when you need it, instead of having to stop to recharge (the units weigh around 1.5-pounds each, less than most batteries). You also get better range: a battery-powered bike typically gets 20 to 30-miles on a charge. The downside is infrastructure: you can find a power-outlet pretty much anywhere in the world. Try finding a compatible fuel-cell in a backwater general-store.

The current units can be designed to put out anything from 1-Watt to 1-Kilowatt. Their futire is probably not in electric bikes but in bigger transportation. Imagine driving your car into the gas-station, popping the hood and swapping in a fuel-cell, just Like Doc Brown drops a tube of plutonium into his time-traveling DeLorean.

Pre-orders for the cells are being taken by SiGNa. For a bike, you’ll probably have a long wait. Full, technical press release below.

Produce High-Pressure Hydrogen From Water [SiGNa. Thanks, Mike!]

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Press Release:

SiGNa Unveils The Most Energy Dense Power Solution For Electric Bicycles
Power system produces clean, safe and portable hydrogen power – zero air pollution

NEW YORK – October 5, 2010 — The race to create a hydrogen-based portable power platform sped forward when SiGNa Chemistry, Inc. demonstrated its new ultra-high-performance range extender at the Interbike International Trade Expo. This ground-breaking power platform produces hydrogen gas instantaneously and then converts the hydrogen to electricity using a low-cost fuel cell. The extender creates up to 200W of continuous power; excess energy is stored in a lithium battery for use in more energy-intensive acceleration and hill climbing conditions. A unique attribute is the high level of inherent safety as demonstrated by 3 days of continuous operation at Interbike. The hydrogen is produced at low pressure (50% the pressure of a soda can) and the only emission is water vapor.

For the rider, the extender triples the range of their e-bike with minimal additional weight. Existing e-bikes have a range of up to 20 miles without pedaling; SiGNa’s system reaches up to 60 miles without pedaling for each carried fuel cartridge. The energy density of each SiGNa cartridge is more than 1,000 Watt-hours/kilogram compared to advanced Li-ion batteries at approximately 65 Watt-hours/kilogram. The fuel cartridges are hot-swappable, lightweight (< 1.5 pounds) and inexpensive, making this a realistic solution for any e-bike owner.

“The extender uses inherently-safe reactive metal powders to produce electric power. By integrating SiGNa’s hydrogen-generation technology with an e-bike, we have demonstrated an unprecedented power solution with no greenhouse gas emissions,” says Michael Lefenfeld, President and CEO of SiGNa Chemistry, Inc. SiGNa’s range extender was demonstrated on a Pedego® electric bicycle, but it is directly compatible with most electric bicycle models.

Sodium silicide makes this portable power system possible. Sodium silicide is a safe, air-stable reactive metal powder that instantly creates hydrogen gas when it comes into contact with water. Any type of water can be used including potable water, polluted water, sea water, or even urine. Once the fuel cartridge is depleted, the rider is left with an environmentally-safe byproduct (sodium silicate) that is fully contained in a disposable or reusable cartridge.

SiGNa has adapted its award-winning powders for use in many industrial applications including pharmaceuticals and oil refining. Since sodium silicide is safe, inexpensive and easily transportable, the portable power market is a natural fit. Says Lefenfeld, “SiGNa’s portable-power system overcomes two key challenges with using hydrogen for transportation applications – adequate hydrogen storage and safe transport. SiGNa has begun by developing a system that provides power to e-bikes; we envision this platform will become a primary or back up power source for many transportation applications.”
SiGNa’s portable power platform can be utilized in any standalone application that require from 1 W to 1 kW of power including generators, lawn mowers, golf carts, and consumer electronics.
Pre-orders are being taken now at sales@signachem.com.


Commuter Cycle Concept is Bike and Briefcase

Want to ride to the office, but can’t find anywhere to put your briefcase? Then try the commute with Marcos Madia’s Bikoff concept: it is both bicycle and briefcase.

Contrary to appearances, the bike doesn’t go inside the briefcase. Instead, the case is an important structural part of the bicycle, which is itself a very simple folder with a hinge in the main tube. When assembled, the case slots in, locks the bike open and provides extra support to that rather weak-looking tube.

Going on the computer-generated images, the specs include a carbon-fiber body, disk-brakes with the cables running inside the tubes, rear suspension and a rather neat-looking seat/seatpost combo. I like the simplicity, even whilst I worry that the rear brake-cable could easily be snipped by the scissoring hinge. If I was in the market for a folding bike, though, I’d likely choose a Brompton – they fold up into a tiny package, and they seem to do it with nothing more than the flick of the wrist.

Marcos Madia’s Bikoff [Coroflot via Core77]

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Deadly Bike Has Flame-Throwers, Ejector Seat

The BOND bike is a result of design-by-committee, Mad Max-style. The name stands for Built of Notorious Deterrents, and although it has the trademark James Bond ejector seat firing from the seat-tube, the real inspiration is clearly the Road Warrior.

The origin of this pavement-assault-vehicle is odder than its appearance. A UK bike insurer asked 800 cyclists what they most hated about cycling, and then addressed these problems in the BOND. The result is deadly.

The bike has a flamethrower to smoke any vehicle that gets too close, a caterpillar-track to deal with pot-holes, the aforementioned ejector-seat for dealing with thieves and a retractable ski-blade for bad weather. It’s clearly impractical, and is coincidentally almost identical to the drawings of bikes I did as a seven-year-old.

You can’t buy it, and we don’t recommend making one unless you want to be arrested as soon as you leave the front yard. You can, however, buy bike insurance, which will help a lot when you have to pay the medical bills of a recently immolated truck-driver.

BOND bicycle boasts ejector seat and flame thrower [ETA Insurance]

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Photos: Tiny Smart Car Secured with Giant Bike-Lock

The Smart is a great little car, perfect for the city. It’s tiny, has one of those clever gearboxes that can be either manual or auto, it fits into almost any parking space and – despite popular ignorance – is very safe. But how do you stop somebody from just picking it up and carrying it off in their pocket?

With a big-ass bike-lock, that’s how. Just take a giant Kryptonite Evolution Mini (maxi?), pass it through the open windows and lock it to a lamppost. Easy, unless you left anything valuable on the seat.

Of course this is an ad, but when ads are this good we don’t care. The spot was created by the BBDO agency of Toronto, Canada, and is supposed to show that the Smart is as versatile in the city as a bike. I spot one big mistake, though. That giant shackle uses the old-style Kryptonite lock-mechanism that could be opened with the barrel of a Bic pen. All you need is a giant biro and you have yourself a new car.

Smart Bike Lock [Ads of the World]

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Recumbent Trike is Less Portland, More Tron

I went shopping for a recumbent bike the other day, and the sales clerk told me to come back when my beard was bushy enough. Just kidding (about buying a recumbent – my beard is actually quite lush), although these combination bike/couches are usually associated with facial hair and fleece-jackets. The OOPHAGA, from designer Milos Todorovic, smashes this otherwise sound opinion with its high-tech good looks and built-in weaponry.

The OOPHAGA, named after those brightly colored dart-frogs you always see on wildlife magazines, looks more like something from Akira or Tron than from Portland. And like Tron’s light-cycles, it exists only inside a computer. Were it ever made, though, it would be constructed from carbon fiber, and the laid-back position and reverse-trike layout, with two-wheels at the back, would keep it both comfy and stable.

Todorovic’s specs include customizable everything, which is of course easy to do when you’re tweaking pixels in a CAD app. The part I really love, though, is the Mad Max-like chain-wheel up front. Look at it, stuck out there and ready to chomp on the tires of any cars that dare to get in its way. Maybe Todorovic could revisit the design and add some pop-out, wheel-mounted dagger-blades. Forget about the carbon fiber. I want weapons.

OOPHAGA trike [Bicycle Design]

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The Joust: A Travel-Ready Bike-Polo Bike

Every year, the Interbike show in Las Vegas brings new and updated products from the big bike-makers. It also has lots of weird niche bikes, which are probably a lot more interesting. And you can’t get much more niche than polo bike designed for travel.

This is the Joust, from Fleetvelo. It was designed by a fellow named Tucker Schwinn, who is both part of the famous bike-making Schwinn family and also a bike polo player. It is this last part that has lead to a bike that looks almost perfect for the sport.

First, the Joust is tough. It has fat steel tubes which have extra reinforcement where they join. I have snapped two frames this summer, both where the bottom bracket meets the seat-tube, so this is important. Second, the fork and frame are wide enough to take fat-tires (the front in this case is made for a 26-inch wheel). Fat tires are more comfortable but more importantly give better grip when braking hard into a turn, where a front-wheel skid can cause disaster.

The Joust is also made to take v-brakes front and back. The most popular polo bike so far is the Cutter, from BMX-maker Volume. It has no drilling for a front brake. The same 135mm axle-length is also used front and back, so you only need carry a spare rear-wheel and you can also use it up front.

But the last, most impressive piece of design is the S and S coupling. This is a super-light yet strong pair off joints that let you split the bike in two for travel. S and S makes travel-cases that are barely larger than the diameter of a wheel, and not very deep, either. Using these makes air-travel a breeze, and you can avoid the crazy charges some airlines levy on bikes.

All this design does’t come cheap, though. The frame alone is $650 ($620 unpainted). That’s a lot for a bike that you’re just going to thrash into the ground, but then again, it’s a lot cheaper than buying a new beater road-bike every couple months, which is what I’m doing now.

The Joust is built-to-order, and currently takes around three weeks to ship.

Fleetvelo Joust Polo Frame [Urban Velo]

Joust product page [Fleetvelo]

Photo: Urban Velo

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Owleye Solar Bike Lights Also Charge via USB

Owleye makes solar-powered bike-lights, but don’t worry if you forgot to leave one on the window-ledge all day – you can quickly juice the built-in li-ion batteries via USB.

The lamp in question is the catchily-named 1996-906. Like all Owleye’s other lights, it has solar-panel on the side which will provide enough charge for 90 minutes if left to soak in the photons for two-hours. LEave it in the sun for four hours and switch the 200-lumen LED to flashing-mode and you can enjoy six-hours of night-biking.

The trick here is that you don’t need to turn the house-lights on if its a cloudy day, or to charge the lamp overnight. With the 1996-906, you can just plug in to a handy USB-port or charger and juice it that way.

The idea is a good one – I hate buying batteries or even swapping-out rechargeables. The lights are also small, so you can keep them handy in a backpack or pocket. They’re not cheap, however. Online, this model is going for $80 a set. If you don’t need the USB option, Owleye makes cheaper, bulkier lamps starting at $20.

Owleye product page [Owleye via Urban Velo]

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