Am I missing something... it looks like the chainring is able to spin independently of the pedals, as if they moved the freewheel from the rear hub to the bottom bracket. Without that this would never work like he demonstrates. I've never seen the freewheel on the chainring/bottom bracket on a bike in the US, is this a common in other parts of the world?
SamBam|1 year ago
I studied the video, and the only thing that I can conclude is that he simply unbolted the pedals from the chain ring. The pedals would therefore not be doing anything at all except support the rider's feet.
The site says "pedaling recharges the battery." This would require re-bolting the pedals back on.
It's hard to see angles that can really make this clear. Maybe there are some freewheels that let the chain ring spin independently of the pedals, which makes no sense to me.
phkahler|1 year ago
IMHO that would be a safety hazard if they removed it from the rear hub. Without that, the chain will always be moving when the bike is moving. If your pants or anything else gets caught in there it ain't stopping.
Leaving it in the back AND putting it in the front as well is probably viable if a bit redundant.
ghist|1 year ago
I have a much simpler kind of bike where this is also the case :)
zwieback|1 year ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dwpnxh_Vxpk
Lio|1 year ago
I was always told that that is so you can use smaller sprockets front and rear for the same ratio, giving you more bottom bracket clearance when you're hopping about the place.
Obviously that's a very specific type of bike for a very specific purpose though.
analog31|1 year ago
prmoustache|1 year ago
There was a french company named HXR components which used to produce that, I think they went bankrupt. Nowadays there is the Rocksteady Magic from boutique euro brand Intend: https://www.intend-bc.com/products/rocksteady-magic/