a.twiddler
Veteran
The main benefit of a hub gear for recumbents and other small wheeled bikes is to be able to allow a high top gear without having to have a huge chainring. An awful lot of recumbents (trikes and bikes) do have small wheels so a greater percentage of them will have a hub gear of some sort. The ability to be able to change gear at a standstill is a sort of side effect of the design, though I've found it useful on my bikes.
The Rans Stratus XP has shown me that a straightforward 3 X 9 derailleur set up can work quite well as long as you bear in mind the need to anticipate gear changes a bit more than you would on an upright bike. It seems also that the small ring is used more than I would use the low ratio hub gear on the Linear, so I'm not too far off the right gear if I should end up stopping suddenly. We're not robots, and everyone ends up in the wrong gear some time, so the ability to downshift when stopped is the ultimate option if it's available.
Stopping and starting, it's all down to practice. It might seem odd, but you can reduce wobbliness by pedalling against a little rear brake as you come to a halt. The longer you can keep your feet on the pedals the better, even to a standstill, though it's hard to judge it all at first. It might be purely psychological, but its about feeling that you're in charge, rather than the bike. It probably feels at if it has a mind of its own at the moment.
The Rans Stratus XP has shown me that a straightforward 3 X 9 derailleur set up can work quite well as long as you bear in mind the need to anticipate gear changes a bit more than you would on an upright bike. It seems also that the small ring is used more than I would use the low ratio hub gear on the Linear, so I'm not too far off the right gear if I should end up stopping suddenly. We're not robots, and everyone ends up in the wrong gear some time, so the ability to downshift when stopped is the ultimate option if it's available.
Stopping and starting, it's all down to practice. It might seem odd, but you can reduce wobbliness by pedalling against a little rear brake as you come to a halt. The longer you can keep your feet on the pedals the better, even to a standstill, though it's hard to judge it all at first. It might be purely psychological, but its about feeling that you're in charge, rather than the bike. It probably feels at if it has a mind of its own at the moment.