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Married to Night Train
- Location
- Salford, UK
Yellow Fang said:I'd also be interested in a commuter bike with integrated lights, perhaps powered by a hub dynamo. This means you don't ever need to remember to take them off to avoid them being nicked. I saw an interesting mini-bike on the On-One site in which the lights were integrated into top tube/cross-bar.
How integrated do you need? Dynamo lights are generally wired in and bolted on, and theft of the lights is pretty rare. I have them on my winter hack - albeit with a bottle dynamo, but I plan to upgrade to hub dynamo when I can. That's on a bike built of bits, no special design. My tourer will also eventually have bolted on hub dynamo lights. It's not really new, or all that hard to get hold of.
I wondered if it was possible to design a bike that had a front brake that didn't require a lead neither. I'm sure it's possible, but I'm not too sure how. Possibly, internal cable routing, electronically activated brakes signalled by a small transmitter, or some sort of regenerative braking.
That's just what we don't need - more complication and an electronic system to go wrong/need a battery. There's a reason cables are virtually universal, they work, they are simple, they are relatively easy to fix. Don't turn a bike into a version of a modern car that can't be fixed without a computer.
Archie is right that it's hard to improve something so simple without just making it needlessly complicated. Andy has it right about the percieved barriers from non-cyclists. Punctures - well, you can get pretty robust tyres these days, if you are prepared to carry the weight, and shaft/belt drive has been done and doesn't quite catch on and will never be as efficient as a chain. Cold and Wet? Design a velomobile that costs 200 quid and doesn't make everyone think (wrongly) of the C5...