Weekend Reading List (03.29.2014): Stop Running, Take or Share, Crowd Funding

Stop Running

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From Runner’s World: Should Runners Jog In Place At Stoplights?
You’ll look ridiculous if you do. Then again, the world’s best runner does it, so maybe you should too? Continue reading Weekend Reading List (03.29.2014): Stop Running, Take or Share, Crowd Funding

SRAM’s Show Of Force

SRAM-Force-CX2This month SRAM released details of its new Force CX2 group, a single-chainring cyclocross racing parts kit that reportedly borrows technology from its single-chainring mountain bike groups. Force CX1 uses SRAM’s X-Sync chainring technology, which uses alternating wide- and narrow-teeth to improve chain retention. The chainring design is combined with a rear derailleur with a roller bearing clutch, X-Sync pulleys and other technologies to improve chain retention. The parts will be available July 1.

SRAM Official Website

Armor Warmers

StantoVeloThe StantoVelo Protective Arm Warmers could just as easily be called “armor warmers,” as these feature 6mm EPDM foam padding within the Lycra/elastane and micro fleece fabric. The result is a cycling arm warmer that features an antibacterial and waterproof covering for those cool spring rides – but also some padding to protect from road rash and much worse. The StantoVelo logo is even reflective to help riders be seen at night.

StantoVelo Official Website

Yuba Boda Do Again!

Boda-BodaYuba Bicycles has updated its Boda Boda cargo bike with new accessories for carrying children, adult passengers, groceries or a surfboard – yes a surfboard. The bike, which is also available in “Step-Over Red,” features a redesigned rear cargo and passenger rack, which is now compatible with Yepp child seats. The 2014 Boda Boda also offers new mounts for its Bread Basket front basket, new Cruz Cream tires, rear disc brake tabs, new handlebars and saddles and removable Love Handle side loaders for easier shipping.

Yuba Bicycles Official Website

Nau Covers Up For Spring

NauThe calendar says spring – and while winter might hang on, we know that soon the rains will fall and wash away the snow. That’s the good news for cyclists. The bad news is that it will mean wet riding. However, Nau has you covered. The apparel maker has introduced its Spring 2014 Pedal Collection, which includes the Poncho Via, a hardshell poncho made from a three-layer blend of recycled polyester and cotton.

It features sealed seams and water resistant DWR finish to protect your clothes from the rain. A belted waist ties on the front while a long back protects the back as well as seat from wet commutes to and from work.

Nau Official Website

Allo Allo!

AlloThe Allo promises to be the world’s first bike mount-speaker combination, which can provide riders with a safer way to access a smartphone while riding. The Allo features a built-in speaker that can allows users to listen to music, navigation and even make phone calls without having to take their hands off the handlebars and without the need of headphones.

“I’m passionate about biking and music and saw there was no safe product out there that let me combine the two,” said Benji Miller, inventor of the Allo. “After seeing many cyclists illegally and unsafely use their earbuds or phones while riding, I wanted to create a way for people to use their smartphones while still being safe, which is when I first started designing and creating the Allo. With design experts on the team, they fine-tuned the concept to what it is today.”

Miller launched a Kickstarter project earlier this month to help produce the Allo. Video after the jump

Six More Cities Get Green Lanes

PeopleForBikesPeopleForBikes – formerly Bikes Belong – has selected six more cities for its Green Lane Project. The bicycle advocacy group will conduct a two-year program to build protected lanes in six new U.S. cities including Boston, Denver, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh and Seattle. This follows the original Green Lakes Project that brought lanes to Austin, Chicago, Memphis, Portland, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.

Green lanes are on-street lanes separated from traffic by curbs, planters, parked cars or posts intended to help organize the street and make riding a bike an appealing option for more people.The six cities, which were chosen from more than 100 U.S. cities that submitted letters of interest for the program, will receive financial, strategic and technical assistance to create the lanes.

Green Lane Project Official Website

AA Thinks Bikes

AAThe British AA – equal to America’s AAA – has launched a Think Bike campaign that will provide drivers with stickers that could placed on sideview mirrors to remind them to watch for bikes.

BikeRadar reported that the campaign was launched after an AA survey of more than 17,500 drivers found that 93 percent sometimes found it hard to see cyclists and more than half admit to being surprised when a ‘cyclists appears from nowhere.’ Perhaps this program could eventually come to America.

[Via BikeRadar: AA launches Think Bikes sticker campaign]

Weekend Reading List (03.22.2014): BikeRadar on YouTube, Total Madness, Famous Falls

BikeRadar on YouTube

httpv://youtu.be/EKPrSw5xF7k

BikeRadar launches new-look YouTube channel
Eagle-eyed viewers will have noticed that our YouTube channel has been overhauled and that content is cleaner, slicker and sharper than ever. Not seen it? Head to the channel right now to check it out. Continue reading Weekend Reading List (03.22.2014): BikeRadar on YouTube, Total Madness, Famous Falls

Marin Museum To Feature Historic Bike Collection

Marin-MuseumThere is no denying that Marin is a big part of the history of the bicycle, and the Marin Museum of Bicycling will display a selection of bikes from the Igler Collection with pieces dating back to the 1860s. The Igler Collection will form one of two permanent displays at the museum, while the other will be the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame.

Among the collection is an 1868 “boneshaker” velocipede from the first bicycle builder, Ernest Michaux of Paris. The collection also includes an 1880s Coventry Rotary tricycle, the design that held human-powered speed records until improved high-wheel bicycles, such as the collection’s 1886 Rudge, were able to break the records. The collection also features a 1898 Pierce shaft-drive bike, which was that company’s top model until it launched its Pierce Arrow automobile. The Marin Museum of Bicycling, which will double as a cultural center for Marin cyclists, expects to open its doors to the public later this year. Museum construction is underway in downtown Fairfax at 1966 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard.

The Marin Museum of Bicycling Official Website

The Shark is Ready to Ride

Essax-SharkWe’ve seen a lot of interesting bike saddle designs, and lately it has been about changing the profile of the seat. This has included making seats with slots and even holes. The Shark saddle from Essax goes the opposite direction and adds a fin that riders will sit on.

The fin (as seen above) will apparently find a place. The company says this fin will help evenly spread a cyclist’s weight onto the sit bone. We’re not sure we want to be the ones to test it out – and we think we’ll wait to see what people have to say!

Essax Shark Official Website

The Buddy Gives Back

BuddyBikeNext week Buddy Bikes will provide 10 bikes to special needs children as part of the The Michaela Noam Kaplan Great Bike Giveaway. This online contest is organized by The Friendship Circle, a non-profit organization. The third annual contest is currently in progress and has already surpassed the previous contests in donations, prizes and applicants. In 2013, 29 adaptive bicycles were awarded to the contest winners; so far in the 2014 contest, 76 adaptive bicycles are included in the prizes, surpassing the organizations goal to give away 75 bikes.

Entrants submit a photo of their child and a short description of their need for an adaptive bicycle and obtain 50 nominations before the contest ends on March 25, 2014 at 11:59 am (Eastern Standard Time).

The Michaela Noam Kaplan Great Bike Giveaway Official Website