The Chainlink

The folks at Summer Feet Cycling posted the following Huff Post article about the Smart Wheel by FlyKly:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/09/smart-wheel-flykly_n_42471...

This will be on the must see list during my next trip to NY...

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I saw an electric wheelchair a few days ago on my way to work that looked like it had hub motors like these. Same/similar technology?

There's something that just feels fishy about this.  Good looking Slovenian guy with a few bike buzzwords and almost $400K and a video that doesn't really show the product working.  Call me skeptical. http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/flykly/flykly-smart-wheel

While it's cool that it seems easy to retrofit a bike, it only retrofits a fixed gear or singlespeed. That is my biggest skepticism -- that something this simple, without gears (it can ONLY accommodate a single speed chain) could actually climb a decent hill with any kind of load.  

My second biggest skepticism is that it is tied to a smartphone app, which irks me because then it is reliant on someone maintaining that app over the long haul of this device's life. What happens when iOS 8 or 9 comes out and the guys in charge don't update the app because they've moved onto the next silly bike improvement on kickstarter?

Simple, old school, mechanical bikes have the advantage of relatively little built-in obsolescence.  It doesn't take a lot to learn bike maintenance and a well-maintained bike can last decades.  This is not the solution to increasing bike ridership in the city (as the designers claim).  It's yet another expensive device to go in the landfill by 2016 (and it's got e-waste inside so it is much harder to recycle than an old steel bike).    

Electric motors have gobs of tourque. No need for a transmission or gears with a limited top speed like that. I suppose you could add a Schlumpf crankset if you wanted a a few gear choices. 

Looks like there's some news on the smart wheel scene:

http://www.xconomy.com/boston/2013/12/03/superpedestrian-starts-sel...

It seems MIT and the Superpedestrian company hold the patents to an electric wheel kit very similar to the FlyKly design.  I wonder if the $700k FlyKly raised will be for naught,... or maybe for legal fees.

This is the first time I've heard anything remotely negative about Slovenes.

No possibility of confusion in the marketplace. None whatsoever. Nope...

That visit to MIT six months prior to launching our kickstarter campaign? Pure coincidence. These are completely different products and completely different designs. You see, ours is "lumpier."

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