General Cycling Discussion - Dream Machine

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des50
05-21-07, 04:33 AM
Hello......Does anyone have any experiance with the Dream machine bicycle from Herrington? as I am thinking about purchasing one.....thanks


Siu Blue Wind
05-21-07, 06:15 AM
Linky?

Doug5150
05-21-07, 10:07 AM
Hello......Does anyone have any experiance with the Dream machine bicycle from Herrington? as I am thinking about purchasing one.....thanks

http://herrington-catalog.stores.yahoo.net/fs197.html

I don't have any experience with it, but it appears to be the same bike sold by Day6Bicycles.
http://www.day6bicycles.com/

There's a few other bikes out there that are similar in rider position.
Premium among these is the RANS Sport Series, such as the $950 Fusion:
http://www.ransbikes.com/Fusion07.htm

The $1250 Lightfoot Surefoot:
http://www.lightfootcycles.com/surefoot.htm

Getting a bit-more-recumbent, there are
The Sun SunRay (listed in the "recumbents" bikes, I *think* the street price is around $450):
http://www.sunbicycles.com/sun/recumbents/ezSunRay/ezSunRay.htm
The $600 Actionbent Mantaray is also similar though it's listed as out of stock for a couple months:
http://www.actionbent.com/mantaray.html
-And I don't know any others quite similar except for some possible cruiser bikes which come with a single-speed coaster brake but could do quite well with a 7- or 8-speed coaster brake rear hub (though you'd need the shop to do that, and it would add $200+ onto the price).

I have a 2006 Fusion and it's quite more comfortable than a regular bike, but to pedal hard you have to pull on the handlebars--and some of these other bikes you see have very-tall handlebars, so if you pulled hard on them the bars would slip in the stems. Except for the RANS bikes, the Day6/Dream Machine bikes have the shortest handlebars of all, so that's least likely to be a problem.

Also if a normal saddle is uncomfortable, you should be able to use an ergo-seat on the Day6 fairly well. The pedals being located so far forward means that you won't slide off the seat like you do when an ergo seat is mounted on a normal-geometry bicycle.
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hotbike
05-21-07, 10:24 AM
What we've got here, is a semi-recumbent, or a crank-forward bicycle.
Also called Flat Foot, because the rider can put his or her feet flat with their heels touching the ground.

I have a Worksman Y3K:
http://i134.photobucket.com/albums/q119/hotbike/photo003.jpg
(I added the fairing) But the Y3K is out of production.

Giant makes a bike called the Revive, which costs around $700.00 seven hundred dollars.

Someone pointed out last week that there is another one of these flat-foot bikes,the Huffy Venice.

Doug5150
05-21-07, 07:03 PM
What we've got here, is a semi-recumbent, or a crank-forward bicycle.
Also called Flat Foot, because the rider can put his or her feet flat with their heels touching the ground.
I have a Worksman Y3K....But the Y3K is out of production.
Giant makes a bike called the Revive, which costs around $700.00 seven hundred dollars.
Someone pointed out last week that there is another one of these flat-foot bikes,the Huffy Venice.

I didn't mention "the usual suspects", I just assumed if you went to a couple different bike shops and ask they'd tell you about those.

I've not owned a Revive, but it's rather heavy for what it is. The gearing range isn't real effective and so many say it's not really good for even moderate distance riding.... The people that seemed to like it MOST are people with certain types of back injuries, who don't expect to ride far and who like it partly for its rear suspension.
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