Check out MB pictures page 5 Greatings from Germany Harry has one that apears to be driven from the leftCouldn't we just engineer a Nu-Vinci hub to work on the left side?
Check out MB pictures page 5 Greatings from Germany Harry has one that apears to be driven from the left
I thought the stock sprockets came elliptical from the factor....my idea is a joke. you'd end up with an elliptical sprocket.
I thought that Staton had the hub with left hand thread on the left so it would be the opeset? I will look againIt is not that simple. A BMX free wheel could be seen like a nut. Nut can be flipped around. Of course that would also mean the said free wheel being ran on the left side would always unthread itself. A genuine left side free wheel has threads of a different nature to prevent this from happening.
They are two different animals and in no way interchangeable.
The term flip flop hub is funny too makes no sense. Go Ahead and flip flop the hub around and watch both free wheels come off, won't happen gonna be a free wheeling fool.
Here is another distraction......
http://motorbicycling.com/f42/my-bike-project-17995.html
I thought that Staton had the hub with left hand thread on the left so it would be the opeset? I will look again
I thought the stock sprockets came elliptical from the factor....
Yes, it's that little thing called "spinning", especially at a higher cadence that wins the races. You can't spin properly when your biopacing, no matter what. Round rings rule, that's a fact.They do very slightly prolly helps shifting better.
Remember the old Bio pace sprockets? They faded out rather quickly. Turned out the folks using the normal sprockets were winning all the races.
If you can get by without the neutral, the shimano tricycle transmission rules. Neutral is not needed. either manual or auto clutches work with the trike shifter. The trike shifter can run all day and is only warm to the touch.We just need somebody to come up with a small 3 speed (with neutral) actual transmission that basically bolts onto the back of the engine and runs directly off the drive sprocket.