Thursday, 31 May 2012

Jim Langley rides Pocket Rocket 18 years DAILY





Bike Friday’s amazing Pocket Rocket
Bike Friday Pocket Rocket
In 1990, I set a short-term goal of riding every day and a long-term goal of cycling daily for ten consecutive years. Each ride had to be a real ride, which to me means getting suited up and putting in at least an hour of fitness-pace miles. I’d heard of a runner named Ron Hill who actually ran twice a day for over twenty years, so I knew it was possible. Yet, I figured it would be tougher to bike every day because it requires a place to ride, a proper bicycle and getting prepared to ride; quite a process compared to simply slipping on your shorts and Nikes
None of these hurdles seemed insurmountable, but my job worried me. I had to travel regularly; sometimes even to Europe; and I wasn’t sure how I could continue riding in such unpredictable circumstances. I’d already experienced the hassle of traveling with a bicycle packed in a cardboard box and in a bike case. Because of its size, the airlines charged me $75 or more per flight ($150 for a round trip), which I could not charge to my expense account. Worse, they abused the bike boxes and cases by jamming them in the plane next to other oversize luggage that would bash into the box. Even carefully packed, a lightweight bicycle can get damaged abused like that.
To prevent these problems, I tried shipping my bike via UPS. This is less expensive than the airlines’ fees, but I worried that my bike would be lost or damaged. And, I was never positive it would arrive in time. Of course, I also had to have a safe place to ship it to.
Ed to the rescue
Fortunately, there was an alternative; a new invention. Ed Pavelka, another editor at Bicycling Magazine, had recently purchased a nifty folding bicycle called a Bike Friday Pocket Rocket. He was raving about it. The trick with this bike is that it folds so small that it fits into a traditional suitcase, meaning it travels for free with the other standard-size luggage (no more abuse from crates of auto parts, etc.). But, the other special part is that, a kit is available that turns the suitcase into a trailer allowing you to ride away from the airport towing your gear!
The more I talked to Ed, the more I was convinced that the bike he’d found would be just the ticket for someone about to commit to riding every day. I called up Bike Friday and spoke to the owners and inventors, Hans and Alan Scholtz, and ordered a bike. I knew I was in the right hands because they requested complete body measurements and specifications so that they could build the perfect bike for me. I wanted a lightweight road racer that would perform as well as my traditional bikes. They said I’d have it in two and a half weeks.
Exactly seventeen days later, the bike arrived, packed in its suitcase. It’s so small (22 x 29 x 10 inches), you can’t believe a bike is inside. And, it’s a solid suitcase, built of plastic with wheels on one end and handles on the top and end for easy carrying and pulling. Three latches and a built-in combination lock secure the lid.
It took about thirty minutes to build the bike for the first time. Gloves were included in the tool kit so you can keep your hands clean while building and packing. There are several innovations that allow the bike to fit in such a small suitcase: 20-inch wheels, a frame that folds in half, a swan-like stem and a clever set of drop handlebars that are split in half to neatly tuck into the suitcase (a sleeve in the center reinforces the handlebars for strength where they’re cut). With just a little practice, I was able to pack the bike in 15 minutes and get it road ready in the same amount of time.
The ride
I knew it would ride great because Ed is a first-rate roadie and he wouldn’t tolerate a lousy bike. Also, Ed requires a truly custom frame. He says, “I’m 6 foot 4 (76 inches) but have only a 34-inch inseam.” If Bike Friday could build a frame that Ed could train on, it ought to be easy for them to make one for an average-size guy like me (6 feet tall with a 34-inch inseam). And, sure enough, right out of its case, my fire-engine-red Pocket Rocket was wonderful. The little wheels accelerated beautifully and offered excellent handling. The fit was spot on. And even the gearing felt exactly like my regular road bike.
One of the problems with some bicycles that use small-diameter wheels is a rough ride. Little wheels are more likely to find the bottoms of ruts and holes in the road jarring you on surfaces that would feel smooth on your traditional bike. Alex Moulton solved this problem with front and rear suspension. Hans and Alan’s solution is an ingenious frame design with an unsupported tall seat tube and stem. These flex slightly while you ride, eliminating jolts and keeping the ride as comfortable, if not more comfy, than other thoroughbred machines.
Ed had mentioned that the weirdest phenomenon about the bike was its appearance. If you look down, you expect a strange ride because of the PR’s funny looks. But, as soon as you concentrate on the road, you forget all about the bike’s unique design because it feels exactly like your favorite bikes. Even standing to climb a steep hill, sprinting, descending at top speed and hammering a huge gear — the ride feels spot on.
Curious about the trailer kit, I assembled the cross pieces into a T shape, poked the three built-in bolts through the holes in the bottom of the suitcase, slipped on the two 10-inch pneumatic wheels and clicked the hitch onto the chainstay (it’s a spring-loaded connector from an air-compressor hose!). Riding with the trailer was impressive, too. It’s easy to pull, quiet and there’s no slack between the bike, hitch and trailer. One caveat is that the trailer kit does not completely fit into the suitcase with the bike; one wheel must be carried in your luggage, but that’s no big deal.
Take it everywhere
To date, I’ve thoroughly tested my Pocket Rocket. It’s been to Europe several times, many places stateside and it goes with me on every vacation.
It made it possible to ride from Schiphol Airport to my hotel and all around Amsterdam (the top of the suitcase is perfect for spreading out a map when you’re lost). It allowed me to join group training rides in New Hampshire and Pennsylvania.
It was my commuting machine (much cheaper than a rental car) in South Bend, Indiana, while attending a week-long clinic. And, it makes it possible to squeeze in rides during family vacations by biking to attractions while the family drives and then folding the Pocket Rocket and stuffing it in the trunk of the rental car.
Perhaps the bike’s most amazing trick is that there’s room in the suitcase (as long as you’re not carrying the trailer kit) to pack an indoor trainer (I use an older model called the Quickstand, that’s smaller than most), which means that if you’re traveling to a snowy destination, you can set the bike on a trainer and ride in your hotel room.
This also works if you’re in a traffic-choked city, where it’s too dangerous or smoggy to ride. Obviously, this feature is a big hit with a guy trying to ride his bicycle every single day.
Cycling’s greatest invention
For all these reasons, I feel that the Bike Friday is one of the greatest cycling innovations I’ve seen. And this is coming from a guy who’s been testing products professionally since 1983, and who, during an 8-year stint as Bicycling Magazine’s New Products Editor, evaluated a hundred or so bicycles and over 1,700 products.
I rode the first clipless pedals; tested one of the earliest prototype aero handlebars; reviewed aero cables and Shimano’s debut index shifters. I tested Biopace chainrings and automatic transmissions and twisting brake levers and STI and Ergopower shifting. I’ve ridden dozens of electric bicycles and flat-proof tires. I built three recumbents; rode a fully-faired Moulton, the fastest upright bike in the world, to 40 mph on a racetrack. And, of course, I witnessed the mountain-bike and suspension phenomenon firsthand. Yet, in my opinion, due to its ability to change your life by making quality cycling possible wherever you are, in my opinion the invention that stands head and shoulders above the rest is the Bike Friday.
In fact, after I bought my Bike Friday, every editor at Bicycling Magazine followed suit and we would never go anywhere without our amazing companions (Bike Friday is named after Robinson Crusoe’s sidekick, Friday). At the Interbike bicycle show each year, we would lead the morning rides, all seven of us on our mini-wheelers. And we introduced the bikes to many other riders and proved to them that these wonder bikes do everything regular racers can.
Fit for racing, too
That’s the hardest thing for some riders to believe. They see this weird machine and they can’t accept that it really works. You have to show them. I joined a group training ride once and the guys, unfamiliar with Bike Fridays, tried to drop me. Not a smart move. The bike’s miniature wheels allow drafting more closely than traditional ones, so I’m able to tuck in tight for great shelter.
The harder they pulled at the front to drop me, the more rest I got. When we reached the hills, I was breathing easy and had no trouble winning the climb. I’m a slow sprinter, but being able to draft so nicely, and feeling so strong from resting so much, I was able to contest the town-line finish. Afterwards, the guys couldn’t stop asking questions about the bike.
Ed and others have achieved more impressive results on their Pocket Rockets. Race Across America veteran Rob Templin placed in the grueling Mount Evans Hillclimb on his. And Ed says, “I have a long ride of 190 miles on my Pocket Rocket, a long week of 707 miles, and I once rode the 112-mile El Tour de Tucson on it in 5:05 (no drafting!). Nice bike.”
But, for me, the best thing is that my Pocket Rocket has helped me close in on my major goal of riding every day for ten years. Due to an accident in 1993, I had to start over again, so I’ve still got a ways to go. But, I’m getting closer every day and I could never have done it without my Pocket Rocket. Thank you Bike Friday! (Update: I am now working on year 18.)

Bike Friday for Little People


What about a custom made high-end folding bike for your child?  Well, Bike Friday makes bikes for little people.  Bantam Bike Friday for Little people

JMB biggest bike shop in Langkawi


So I met Cien, operator of the modern, air-con, part of the JMB cycleshop.



Picked up some half-price sunglasses and a mountain bike with disk brakes for a friend.


Ed Foo test rides 5NWT InfinityTour Nuvinci



Mr. Ed Foo, the distributor for Outlieb Pannier Bags dropped by MyFamily Cycles @ Proshop located here at The Club@Bandar Utama, to try the Bike Friday bikes.  He loved the smoothness and quietness of the Nuvinci hub.




Here is Raz's bike friday's blog "getFitFast" latest article on the NWT Nuvinci:
Seattle's Best: Finding the Sweet Spot (Raz--GetFitFast)

Sam Cheong test-rides Pocket Llama Select


Sam Cheong finally came to test-ride the Bike Friday Llama. He said the set-up was perfect except for some minor tweaks.  Here is his assessment:

Sam's review of the Pocket Llama


Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Yeoh Chee Weng prefers Bike Friday Pocket Llama Select 2012

Wednesday, May 23, 2012, I met Mr. yeoh Chee Weng for the first time. This youngish 63-years-old Bike Friday early-adopter has owned a pocket companion since July 2011, and has ridden his bike Friday 5,000 km in 10 months. He loves his touring bike and wanted to try the four select models.











 In summary, he loves the bike friday selects. He requested for a quote for the Llama with upgraded drive gear.

Sumei Toh Rides BF NWT, Llama, Tikit and Pocket Rocket

Sumei Toh was the first client to test-ride all four Bike Friday select models on Tuesday, May 22, 2012. Since I assembled them, no one had ever ridden the bikes until Sumei. So she was riding each bike for the first time. So here is the riding order and general reaction: 


1. She rode the 5 NWT InfinityTour Nuvinci first and said the shifting of the Nuvinci CVT hub was smooth.


 Then adding the trailer with Samsonite flight case, she found that the drag was very small, although noticeable. The New World Tourist model is what Sumei prefers. Although the 5.4 lb nuvinci made it a little too heavy for her.


 2. Pocket Llama select: we assembled it out of the second Samsonite flight case and had to change the Thudbuster suspension seatpost as it was too high for her.



 3. Pocket Rocket Select: being use to drop bars, Sumei really liked the ride and lightness of this bike but the Tiagra Shifters were an upgrade to her old school drop bar twisters.





 4. Future Tikit with delta C-drive belt. She liked the silence of the belt and the fold was as usual quite fascinating.



 Sumei wants to do more research on the nuvinci and belt drive. Hopefully she will be ordering a NWT soon. P

Saturday, 12 May 2012


New bike friday Carbon Tikit Gates Nuvinci

Features
The drivetrain is the Gates Carbon Drive CenterTrack, that offers clean, quiet and smooth shifting that takes the messiness out of commuting. It is combined with the sealed, weather-resistant NuVinci N360 Continuous Variable Transmission hub.

The cutting-edge new design from Gates Carbon Drive CenterTrack offers 20 percent more tensile strength, a slimmer profile and the most advanced debris shedding ever. CenterTrack consists of an alloy front sprocket and stainless steel rear sprocket as well as a 12-millimeter-wide belt embedded with carbon fiber cords.

Carbon Drive requires no greasy lube. That means no more grease stains on clothing and hands. Cleanliness is a huge benefit for cyclists who store their bikes indoors, in an airplane, on a sailboat or inside an RV.

Gates Carbon Drive weighs approximately 240 grams -- half the weight of a chain drive. Lighter weight means higher performance. For urban commuters, it means getting to the office faster with less effort.

Cyclists comment on how powerful Gates Carbon Drive feels underfoot. The strength derives from the carbon fiber cords embedded the belt, which resist stretching.


When it comes to cutting edge technology, the NuVinci N360 Continuous Variable Transmission gives you complete control and the ability to always find the sweet spot, that gear to match your perfect cadence.

The NuVinci N360 hub is Fallbrook Technologies' latest alternative to the limitations and complications of traditional indexed-geared systems.


It offers a simple and seamlessly smooth way of shifting throughout a wide ratio range without power transfer interruptions, or missed shifts.

"As the fixie riders will tell you, there is a special elegance and charm that you get from a simple fixed gear that a derailleur cannot match -- or any gear changer, for that matter," Bike Friday co-Founder Alan Scholz says. "But it seems that derailleurs have won out to date, as most modern 'real bikes' have them."

Derailleurs present maintenance challenges for a lot of cyclists.

"Hub gears solve some of the maintenance and mechanical challenge issues for the cyclist who is not also a top mechanic, nor wants to be one," Scholz says.

"But none of the hub gears to date have had that breakthrough that also gave them a better feel. That feeling of simplicity, elegance, and smoothness that fixed gear bikes promise but cannot deliver on the hills, down winds, and gear pulling challenges of real everyday anywhere cycling."

That's why NuVinci is a game-changer.

"The NuVinci hub is a different solution totally," Scholz says. "Not a new departure but a new way of mating a person to the bike. Doesn't look like it, but when I rode it I was struck by the feel that it was completely smooth and I couldn't tell what gear I was in. There are no gears!"

It didn't take long for Scholz to be convinced.

"Yes, my next personal Bike Friday is going to have a NuVinci combined with Gates Carbon Drive,," Scholz says.

Comment from Yeoh Chee Weng




Hi Andy Ng, I have been using a Bike Friday Pocket Companion for a year now and I love it. I have already use it for more than 5,000km for workouts and leisurely touring. I'm glad that you are now a dealer of BFs. If I want to upgrade my BF I now know whom to contact. Good luck in your business and I hope you do very well.
Via facebook

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

New Bike Friday Models Coming!

New 2012 Select Models from Bike Friday Coming to Malaysia:

1. Pocket Llama Select
2. Future Tikit Select
3. Pocket Rocket Select
4. 5NWT InfinityTour Nuvinci. This has the latest CVT, continuois variable transmission, 360 hubgear from Nuvinci.

New World Tourist with Nuvinci CVT

5 NWT INFINITYTOUR NUVINCI
The New World Tourist can tackle any challenge you throw its way, from multiday touring to daily commuting to simple Sunday afternoon riding.

One of the ways to build a Custom New World Tourist is to add the NuVinci 360 continuously variable transmission (CVT), so you will always find the perfect gear for any situation.

The NuVinci will give you a gear range from 26.5 to 95.5 inches with a 20-tooth cog and 53-tooth ring. 

Features
The NuVinci N360 hub is Fallbrook Technologies' latest alternative to the limitations and complications of traditional indexed-geared systems.

It offers a simple and seamlessly smooth way of shifting throughout a wide ratio range without power transfer interruptions, or missed shifts.

It is now available on our New World Tourist, Pocket Llama, Pocket Crusoe and tikit Customized bikes.

"As the fixie riders will tell you, there is a special elegance and charm that you get from a simple fixed gear that a derailleur cannot match -- or any gear changer, for that matter," Bike Friday co-Founder Alan Scholz says. "But it seems that derailleurs have won out to date, as most modern 'real bikes' have them."

Derailleurs present maintenance challenges for a lot of cyclists.

"Hub gears solve some of the maintenance and mechanical challenge issues for the cyclist who is not also a top mechanic, nor wants to be one," Scholz says.

"But none of the hub gears to date have had that breakthrough that also gave them a better feel. That feeling of simplicity, elegance, and smoothness that fixed gear bikes promise but cannot deliver on the hills, down winds, and gear pulling challenges of real everyday anywhere cycling."

That's why NuVinci is a game-changer.

"The NuVinci hub is a different solution totally," Scholz says. "Not a new departure but a new way of mating a person to the bike. Doesn't look like it, but when I rode it I was struck by the feel that it was completely smooth and I couldn't tell what gear I was in. There are no gears!"

It didn't take long for Scholz to be convinced.

"Yes, my next personal Bike Friday is going to have a NuVinci," Scholz says.

Bike friday review

Overall Experience Rating:

What more could you ask for?
I needed a new bike with lower gearing to cross the Rockies and Appalachians, traveling the 4,200 miles from the US coast to coast.

Knowing that the bike would have to come back and that I would like to do some international bike touring, as well as the fact that my city lacks bike racks on some buses drove me to consider a folder.

I have met several people with folders, including Dahons, but for touring people always raved about their BF. On a coastal driving trip, I stopped into Eugene to try one out. Wow. Pretty nice.

It took me awhile to commit to the price, but in comparison to a Surley Long Haul, it was comparable. In retrospect, the 4,200 miles were delightfully uncomplicated bicycle wise. The one suggestion for someone putting that many miles on a NWT would be to get the Chris King headset, for the stock headset required tightening every 1,000 miles.

Other cons are the lack of a top tube to support a fully loaded bike while straddling the bike and the increased difficulty (very tight) of changing a tire due the small circumference.

The complaints are few. The pros include the ability to fold the bike and step on a train, plane and bus (without extra cost or restriction) as well as its ability to start from a start quickly (important on a hill) and fast handling to avoid obstacles. Fully folding the bike to put into the suitcase takes me 30-45 minutes and putting it back together takes me about 15 min.

Submitted by: Leslie Duggleby April 23, 2012