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#1
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
I'm sure some of you cruising sailors carry a bicycle of some sort on your
boat ,, you do, right? Where do you keep it? Do you break it down and stow it that way? I think a bicyle and a sailboat are about the two best things in the whole wide world; period. |
#2
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
"Thomas Wentworth" wrote:
I'm sure some of you cruising sailors carry a bicycle of some sort on your boat ,, you do, right? Where do you keep it? Do you break it down and stow it that way? Yes - Bob got a folding bike for his birthday and it came with a bag to stow it in folded. The first year I tried to ride it, but it is just too big for me and can't be adjusted down. The second year he had a regular bike, but it just got terribly rusty. He got a folding bike for me second hand for about $25 and fixed it up and sewed a bag for it too. We stowed them back by the dinghy (center cockpit boat). They can actually be taken ashore in a dingy unless you have a kayak or something. It is still a pain to get them on and off the boat. I think a bicyle and a sailboat are about the two best things in the whole wide world; period. grandma Rosalie S/V RosalieAnn, Leonardtown, MD CSY 44 WO #156 http://home.mindspring.com/~gmbeasley/id1.html |
#3
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
In article ,
Rosalie B. wrote: "Thomas Wentworth" wrote: I'm sure some of you cruising sailors carry a bicycle of some sort on your boat ,, you do, right? Where do you keep it? Do you break it down and stow it that way? Yes - Bob got a folding bike for his birthday and it came with a bag to stow it in folded. The first year I tried to ride it, but it is just too big for me and can't be adjusted down. The second year he had a regular bike, but it just got terribly rusty. He got a folding bike for me second hand for about $25 and fixed it up and sewed a bag for it too. We stowed them back by the dinghy (center cockpit boat). They can actually be taken ashore in a dingy unless you have a kayak or something. It is still a pain to get them on and off the boat. I think a bicyle and a sailboat are about the two best things in the whole wide world; period. grandma Rosalie S/V RosalieAnn, Leonardtown, MD CSY 44 WO #156 http://home.mindspring.com/~gmbeasley/id1.html My brother and his wife cruise off the NE coast each summer on his J/34C. They used to have folding bikes and decided their regular road bikes were more comfortable and worked better and they sacrificed one QB and some bungie cords. With wheels off, most road bikes (or cross bikes) fit in larger boats. h -- To respond, obviously drop the "nospan"? |
#4
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
"Thomas Wentworth" wrote in
news:ODnTf.212$kB1.154@trndny07: I think a bicyle and a sailboat are about the two best things in the whole wide world; period. A rideable bike is pretty bulky to store on a boat. Besides, if you've been to sea, you've gotten plenty of exercise in muscles you didn't know you had, so you deserve a little RnR in port. So, I got this one because it was better'n Cap'n Geoffrey's scooter and its wider tires don't drop in the gaps his do on the crappy docks. http://www.largoscooters.com/bladezxtrse.html I got mine for $299 on sale at Dick's Sporting Goods last year. It'll run 16mph for 8 miles, lots further if you drive slower at bike speed. The only noise is the tires on the road and a little from the chain drive. BladeZ' are very nicely made units. To store it, you pull the pin holding the seat on and pull the seat post out of the scooter. (It's fun to ride around standing up without the seat, too.) Then, you pull back on that release handle under the steering and the whole front end pivots to horizontal with the front wheel going up and the steering coming flat against the motor housing making it as flat as it can get. The steering locks in the down position so you can use the steering stick as a carrying handle. Now flat, it fits in a locker or alongside the engine. If you set heavy stuff on top of it, unlike the bike, it won't crush it. Just be careful of the exposed control cables. The batteries are in a little bag with carrying handle under the deck with a plug so you can swap a dead one for a hot one, but the charger only works plugged into the XLR microphone jack under the steering. Battery status is a 3-color LED next to the main power switch...green=good, yellow=goin' down, red=I'm gonna shut it off in 5 more minutes. The computer won't let you deep cycle and ruin the battery pack. Throttle power is very smooth as it uses pulse-width-modulation technology. When you squeeze the disk brake handle, there's a switch that closes to turn the PM motor into a dynamic brake, recharging the batteries going downhill. Great fun to ride, especially when the boat is a mile down a big marina's dockage from the parking lot! Get a chain lock to secure it to something as it is easily picked up and stolen. |
#5
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
Larry wrote:
snip http://www.largoscooters.com/bladezxtrse.html I got mine for $299 on sale at Dick's Sporting Goods last year. It'll run 16mph for 8 miles, lots further if you drive slower at bike speed. The only noise is the tires on the road and a little from the chain drive. BladeZ' are very nicely made units. snip Great fun to ride, especially when the boat is a mile down a big marina's dockage from the parking lot! Get a chain lock to secure it to something as it is easily picked up and stolen. I'd probably pay money to see you cruising along on that toy! |
#6
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
Don White wrote in newsjzTf.46388$VV4.727493
@ursa-nb00s0.nbnet.nb.ca: I'd probably pay money to see you cruising along on that toy! Stop by! I rode it to the barber shop this morning before the rain drizzle started. I have a fair amount of places to ride it from home in its 8-10 mile range. I have two 36AH gelcells under my workbench that have been looking for a home. They are quite flat and a little wider than the scooter's deck. That's 3 times the capacity of the 12AH AGM's that's in it, now. I might try to experiment with them in series for 24V this spring. I'm always worried I've traveled too far and might run out of power before making it home. I've come in with the light yellow with no load a few times. 16 mph on this thing is like riding a Corvette on the interstate. I'm more than willing to lose a little speed to gain a little range....(c; Sure beats those old fogie electric chairs they want $8000 for because some idiot insurance company or Medicare pays for it..... After all....I'm "only" 60! |
#7
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
On Mon, 20 Mar 2006 21:56:52 -0500, Larry wrote:
I have two 36AH gelcells under my workbench that have been looking for a home. They are quite flat and a little wider than the scooter's deck. That's 3 times the capacity of the 12AH AGM's that's in it, now. So where will you find room for the PC, ham rig and antenna? |
#8
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
Wayne.B wrote in
: So where will you find room for the PC, ham rig and antenna? Cellphone! |
#9
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
Larry wrote: "Thomas Wentworth" wrote in news:ODnTf.212$kB1.154@trndny07: I think a bicyle and a sailboat are about the two best things in the whole wide world; period. A rideable bike is pretty bulky to store on a boat. Besides, if you've been to sea, you've gotten plenty of exercise in muscles you didn't know you had, so you deserve a little RnR in port. So, I got this one because it was better'n Cap'n Geoffrey's scooter and its wider tires don't drop in the gaps his do on the crappy docks. http://www.largoscooters.com/bladezxtrse.html I got mine for $299 on sale at Dick's Sporting Goods last year. It'll run 16mph for 8 miles, lots further if you drive slower at bike speed. The only noise is the tires on the road and a little from the chain drive. BladeZ' are very nicely made units. snip I've seen kids around here riding these things. They go amazingly fast and quite a long distance between recharges. Other people may think its a little funny to see an adult on a scooter, but I think you've got a winner for that 2 mile to the grocery store and back. Looks like it folds up pretty compact also. Interesting solution. Don W. |
#10
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Bicycle ,, Where do you put it?
Larry ,,, no thanks on the battery powered motor scooter.. I'm an all
natural kind a guy. Sails .. wind. Bicycle ... peddle. I think what I might do is store part of the bicycle on deck and the rest below. I can bag the front wheel easy enough. The seat can be taken off with a quick release. I did see a picture the other day of a boat that had two mountain bicycles tied to the mast. Problem is rust. In the ocean environment, those bicycles will rust out in a few days. As for getting the bicycles on and off; probably use the main sail halyard with the winch. Off load into the dinghy. ======================---------000000098888888888888888888888888888888888888 "Larry" wrote in message ... "Thomas Wentworth" wrote in news:ODnTf.212$kB1.154@trndny07: I think a bicyle and a sailboat are about the two best things in the whole wide world; period. A rideable bike is pretty bulky to store on a boat. Besides, if you've been to sea, you've gotten plenty of exercise in muscles you didn't know you had, so you deserve a little RnR in port. So, I got this one because it was better'n Cap'n Geoffrey's scooter and its wider tires don't drop in the gaps his do on the crappy docks. http://www.largoscooters.com/bladezxtrse.html I got mine for $299 on sale at Dick's Sporting Goods last year. It'll run 16mph for 8 miles, lots further if you drive slower at bike speed. The only noise is the tires on the road and a little from the chain drive. BladeZ' are very nicely made units. To store it, you pull the pin holding the seat on and pull the seat post out of the scooter. (It's fun to ride around standing up without the seat, too.) Then, you pull back on that release handle under the steering and the whole front end pivots to horizontal with the front wheel going up and the steering coming flat against the motor housing making it as flat as it can get. The steering locks in the down position so you can use the steering stick as a carrying handle. Now flat, it fits in a locker or alongside the engine. If you set heavy stuff on top of it, unlike the bike, it won't crush it. Just be careful of the exposed control cables. The batteries are in a little bag with carrying handle under the deck with a plug so you can swap a dead one for a hot one, but the charger only works plugged into the XLR microphone jack under the steering. Battery status is a 3-color LED next to the main power switch...green=good, yellow=goin' down, red=I'm gonna shut it off in 5 more minutes. The computer won't let you deep cycle and ruin the battery pack. Throttle power is very smooth as it uses pulse-width-modulation technology. When you squeeze the disk brake handle, there's a switch that closes to turn the PM motor into a dynamic brake, recharging the batteries going downhill. Great fun to ride, especially when the boat is a mile down a big marina's dockage from the parking lot! Get a chain lock to secure it to something as it is easily picked up and stolen. |
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