Chris Keam : accomplished copywriter & video editor

Archive for February, 2009

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

The best darn thing at the outdoors show

The 26kg waterbike has a claimed speed of 6 km/h on the water.

The bike folds up and the whole arrangement fits in a trunk-sized bag. The pontoons and supports are carried on the rear rack when the bike is being ridden on land.
Wazorway

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

The Ebike Effect

EBIKES GAIN MOMENTUM!

I had the good fortune to test ride a Giant Twist Freedom ebike for a couple of weeks. After that experience, it’s easy to understand why I had so many eager ebikers ready and willing to talk to me for my upcoming article in Momentum Magazine.

photo: Ben Johnson

Look for both a general article on the phenomenon and a review of the Giant bike in the March/April issue of Momentum. You can also read about Justin Lemire-Elmore’s cross-country ebike expedition last summer. Coast to coast on less than $10 of electricity!

WHERE TO BUY AN EBIKE IN VANCOUVER
If you’re thinking of purchasing an ebike, I’d heartily recommend JV Bikes in Vancouver for their selection and knowledgeable staff. If a conversion kit to turn your current bike into an ebike is more your thing, Renaissance Bicycles/ebikes.ca should definitely be on your radar. Both stores have been local leaders for the ebike community and can definitely help you figure out the right solution for your particular requirements. How fervently do I believe ebikes hold great promise to open up cycling to new markets and provide a viable transportation alternative to many people who currently don’t cycle? Well, I bought the domain name ebikermagazine.com! Stay tuned for its launch soon.
GIANT DEALERS GET EBIKE TRAINING
I was also invited by Giant Canada marketing manager Randy Pye to attend a dealer orientation session regarding maintenance and troubleshooting of their Twist Freedom bike. Giant technical ambassador Luke Kitzanuk walked the dealers in attendance through the various electronics of the bike and delivered a thorough trouble-shooting demonstration, so bike shops will know how to deal with this new addition to the bike species. This is a new frontier in the cycling industry and bike shops have to know how to service the electric aspect of these bikes if they are going to sell them.
photo: Chris Keam

Giant is making sure their dealers will have that knowledge, not only providing training, but also supplying service manuals and the necessary tools to troubleshoot and repair the Twist Freedom.

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Two Wheels Good, Ted’s Facts Wrong

I sent a letter to the Georgia Straight after Ted Laturnus got the physics of cycling way wrong–in a cruiser bike review he wrote in place of the usual auto-philia. But the editors left out all the good stuff. Below, the de-evolution of a perfectly good ‘pwning

Original article here:
Laturnus Review
Original letter to the Georgia Straight:
It’s nice to see Ted Laturnus acknowledge there’s ways of getting around that don’t involve the automobile, but his ‘Transportation’ column in your Jan. 29 – Feb. 5 edition has some factual errors that cannot go unremarked.

First, the physics. Fat tires and lightweight frames are NOT your friend when it comes to momentum. In fact, heavier frames possess more inertia once in motion. As to the tires, if fat really did roll further, why do competitive road cyclists utilize the narrowest tires feasible? The reality is, a wide tire’s rolling resistance negates the inertial advantage of its weight, due to the larger ‘contact area’ between rubber and pavement.

Mr. Laturnus also contends cars and bikes can coexist. Maybe on some far-off planet where drivers don’t text, eat, or drink (and sometimes all three) while in control of a potentially deadly machine, but here on Earth, it’s been made clear, through scrupulous research and tragically fatal real-world examples–the biggest impediment to a greater use of bicycles as transportation comes from a lack of separate, safer facilities such as bike paths and traffic-calmed streets. These low-cost amenities make cycling for transportation a viable choice for all, from school-age children to seniors, yet they remain a rarity, due in no small part to the dissemination of ill-informed viewpoints by individuals who haven’t done their homework. If Laturnus had taken a moment to contact any of the Vancouver cycling advocates he so churlishly characterizes as militants, I’m sure they would have gladly set him straight and provided mountains of data to support their claims.

Finally, the bizarre proof he uses to back his claim, by citing the sale of bicycles by luxury automakers defies logic by any measure. One might just as well suggest that since a supermarket stocks beef and chicken in the same freezer section, you can put herds of cows and flocks of chickens in the same cramped space. Well, I suppose you could. But somebody’s going to get squished and it’s not the ones with horns.

And the down-sized version that went to print:

Cyclist takes Mister Car to school
Very disappointing.