The most best bike to ride ?
#2
Posted 02 April 2005 - 12:32 PM
Keiser seat is the most comfortable one... But the maintenance can be a pain for the resistance lever. However, the handlebar height adjustment sucks..... It goes up at an angle... so the higher your bar is, the further the handlebar is from your seat....
Star Trac all is good, just that the resistance dial is quite sensitive to sweat and it needs regular servicing.... If you get participants who are really strong, the end up tightening up the adjustments a tad too much, resulting in the bolt itself getting jammed... :roll:
LeMond.. LOVE the resistance which is unpredictable... You can't really pre-determine how much you want.. against the Star Trac it has a wider range of resistance... Although, I really have some issues with the handlebar..... :shock:
All in out of the 3 I love the Star Trac the most.... Although I've not tried the Schwinn, there's one centre here that has it... Gotta go check it out soon...
I've seen bodybike and I like the fact that the wheel is covered... protected away from our sweat :grin:
#3
Posted 08 April 2005 - 11:36 AM
I'v only been riding on two different bikes, the tomahawk and the Body Bike. I've sat on a Schwinn once...
For me the absolute favourit is the BODY BIKE!!!! You can change al the bike settings so that you and your bike can become one and the RPM class is even better and easier to prticipate. You don't have to be in a "fight" with your bike....
The resistnace is so smoothly...almost hard to imagine.....Really great!
Good luck!!
Greetings
#4
Posted 12 April 2005 - 02:56 AM
#5
Posted 12 April 2005 - 07:58 AM
#6
Posted 16 March 2007 - 10:45 AM
I tested a lot of bikes (Schwinn, Dunlop, Bodybike, Precor, H-teq etc) and have to say I hate the bodybike...the MTB bar, lack of ability to move the seat more forward (almost above the bracket)) I'm doing triathlon and I'm used to sit above the bracket, which is not possible by the bodybike. This is no problem with the other brands.
The best? Schwinn. solid, nice to finetune your position and a stabel bar position. also they are lasting very long ( 10 years is no problem)
#7
Posted 21 April 2007 - 05:52 PM
Scighera, on Mar 16 2007, 07:45 PM, said:
I tested a lot of bikes (Schwinn, Dunlop, Bodybike, Precor, H-teq etc) and have to say I hate the bodybike...the MTB bar, lack of ability to move the seat more forward (almost above the bracket)) I'm doing triathlon and I'm used to sit above the bracket, which is not possible by the bodybike. This is no problem with the other brands.
The best? Schwinn. solid, nice to finetune your position and a stabel bar position. also they are lasting very long ( 10 years is no problem)
I'm sorry but I really do think you are NOT talking about the bodybike...everything is adjustable!!!
#8
Posted 23 April 2007 - 09:37 AM
If the Schwinn is anything like the Tomahawk (and from the pictures I should say they're nearly the same), then yes, the saddle can come more forward than the Bodybike will allow. That might be one of the very few advantages of those bikes (from my POV, of course). I'm more comfortable with a roadbike-type setup, and for that, the adjustment positions are just way too course for me. I think the stops for the saddle stem and handlebar stem on the Tomahawk were some 3-4 cms apart, and the handlebar bracket was not adjustable at all. I can't make out from the Nautilus site what saddle comes with the Schwinn, but the Tomahawks had wide "get-the-kids-from-school" gel seats, which I detest.
The Schwinn site is an all-flash site, so I can't link to the exact url, but when I look at http://www.nautilus-international.net/idus...ont/indexN.html, Fitness, Commercial, Schwinn Cycling I see handlebars that look much like the Bodybike handlebars. When looking at this vs this, the main difference would appear to be (to me) that the handlebars on the Schwinn are longer, and that the BB has the "aero-racing bars" at the handlebar stem, vs the Schwinn that has them at the insides of the handles. Is this what you mean with "mtb-style" bars? MTBs don't have handles there the way the BB has them; riding with your hands so near to the middle of the handlebars would be tantamount to suicide in rough terrain.
(thanks, Sigma)
This post has been edited by muis: 23 April 2007 - 11:42 AM
#11
Posted 29 May 2007 - 02:52 PM
Built to resemble road riding? My shiney hiney! Road bikes are carefully chosen and then tailored to match your build. Indoor bikes are always going to be a compromise, but the Tomahawk fails to even provide a compromise, unless you're built exactly like the person it was built for (which could easily be the engineers granny).
This post has been edited by muis: 29 May 2007 - 02:59 PM
#13
Posted 14 June 2008 - 12:47 AM
Reason #1, Made in Denmark, Not Asia. #2, 4-way adjustment (bars and saddle up/down-fore/aft)
#3, Realistic 'Q' factor (the distance between the cranks) #4, Fully enclosed so no sweat, dust or towels getting onto/into the flywheel. #5, Kevlar friction pad that needs no lubrication at all.
#6, Low maintenance. #7, Consistant, smooth resistance.
Dont compare apples with oranges. Schwinn to LeMond to Precor to Keiser to Spinner, go for it. All made in Asia from recycled coke cans and the like. BODYBIKE, Made in Denmark.
Its like comparing a BMW to a Hyundai. Both cars yes, The same? Hell no!
Just remember, they all feel pretty good when they are new. The test is 6-12 months down the track when the workload starts to show.
Finally, to be authentic to the program, doesn't it make sense to use the same bikes that Les Mills use?
They tested just about every bike on the market before endorsing BODYBIKE. Mainly because of the reasons listed above.
www.body-bike.com.au if you want a real indoor cycle.
Revs
#15
Posted 14 June 2008 - 11:59 PM
danika1984, on Jun 14 2008, 01:42 PM, said:
Danika, go to Active Leisure Centre in Wanniassa. They have 25 BODYBIKE Supremes in their new RPM studio.
I know that one of the Unis down there are due to get Supremes in August also. Canberra will have two of the most up to date RPM studios in the country!
Lee
#16
Posted 15 June 2008 - 05:25 AM
am on uni hols soon will try out Active, thanks for the tip Lee.
#17
Posted 22 December 2008 - 03:50 AM
There was a bike called bodycycle that was awesome as well, out of canada, but they closed.
I just ordered 14 Body Bikes for our studio in arizona, (small community so 14 is a good start) Hopefully will need to order another 10 in the spring.
t
#19
Posted 17 November 2010 - 01:26 AM
SPIN, on 16 November 2010 - 11:24 PM, said:
Seems to be that woman suffer more problems than men, probably because woman are down under where men are more forward.
Is it the seat on the body bike you are liking for comfort, or is it some other factor such as better pelvis position due to the adjust-ability of the bike?
#20
Posted 17 November 2010 - 02:10 AM
mikesbytes, on 17 November 2010 - 01:26 AM, said:
Is it the seat on the body bike you are liking for comfort, or is it some other factor such as better pelvis position due to the adjust-ability of the bike?
Its the actual seat I think it is cut better, seems to fit others create massive irritation... Schinn is okay but the resistance dial isnt as smooth.
Mind you, I think this is just too much detail now!


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