That is certainly a great idea, I will consider that together with an extra strut for torsion stiffness. Thanks again!You're welcome! I'm glad you found the information useful. Thank you for the videos, I better understand where you are having the issue. You may be able to resolve a bit of that by moving the fork struts up to the axle. It is possible you may need to fabricate a new pair from something stronger than tubing.
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Haha!Before I even saw the bed photo, the sound of your bike made me think you could change the build name to "The Floppin' Floozy"
Yes indeed agreed! I could get over certain bumps and potholes though, I was actually surprised!With a bike this low, you really don't really want much spring action anyway, so you could brake it in such a way that you more or less cancel out the springer in exchange for a more rigid fork.
I am also thinking right now about the chain guide or tensioner. I saw a lot of long bike photos that did not have a tensioner, but more of a guide with a derailleur wheel.
The teeth from the wheel 'sinking' in the chain keeps it from falling off 'at a certain tension' (y'all follow me?).
I don't have any concrete ideas yet, but just trying out materials and stuff.
I do want to protect the frame from sideways chainslap. Maybe with a plastic piece, since it dampens the sound a bit... or else I might have to change the name to 'rattlesnake'
Some thoughts and notes:
The principle visualized.
Looks cool. Attach a derailleur wheel at an opening. Maybe I could use two holes, so the chain has a little bit of play before rattling against the aluminum.
Aluminum guides. Also here, a derailleur wheel (or two) could be used.
Bronze plate, could cut it to size, bend it and use it as a skid / 'channeling guide' plate for the chain.
Profile. Add speedholes and large holes for the chain to go through...
Plastic guide. Its silent at least. I will not use the entire strip like this. More a part of it.
I have seen THIS! Looks cool, reminds me of a ferris wheel. Does guide it a little bit and it will fall of when the chain is too slack. But it doesn't guide the chain sideways.
I could... I could use this with the derailleur wheels above the top part of the chain and below the lower part of the chain. Gives it this planetary wheel feel... I'll ponder on that...
[EDIT] The above contraption is called a 'Ghostring' or a floating chainring. Mostly utilized on fixed gear bicycles.
The main goal is to "guide" the chain to keep it from slapping.
If I use derailleur wheels, I have got to position them in such a way that, when braking/accelerating the slack part of the chain can't fall of the derailleur wheel.
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