I was thinking...
#1
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I was thinking...
Around the time of the first BMX bikes(1980?), why did they choose to have right side drive stock for most bikes? Is there any reasoning behind that? Is it in any way harder or more complicated to have left side drive? I wouldn't think so, but I was just wundering.
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1) BMX bikes have been around since long before 1980.
2) 99.9% of bikes on the planet use right-hand drive.
2) 99.9% of bikes on the planet use right-hand drive.
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i think what it was is..most people jump to the left,,,,so you don't have your sprocket in the way....but like me....i jump to the right...so i have a lefty....probably they just went with the norm. of how people rode....and i think that ALL roadies and mountain bikes have it on the right....It's Tradition
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If I were a thinking man, which I make no claim to be...
When I originally designed bicycles I would have thought about the traditional ways that people entered and left carriages and what side of the road they were on. If I am to be riding a bicycle on the right side of the roadway, which quite often has mud and dirt, and I want to protect my drive system from this mud and dirt as it is the most delicate part of the bike, then I would put that drive system as far from the muck as possible.
That would be, on the right side of the bike.
There was ZERO thought of grinding (ha, good one) when bmx bikes were invented. Grinding didn't really start for many, many years later and has not part in that thought process.
I would say that what we call 'tradition' most likely had pretty firm roots for the decision that was made on the early bikes and it is likely that some prototype LSD bikes were made and it was determined that the RSD bikes protected the bike from the elements a bit more, so was the better choice in manufacturing.
When I originally designed bicycles I would have thought about the traditional ways that people entered and left carriages and what side of the road they were on. If I am to be riding a bicycle on the right side of the roadway, which quite often has mud and dirt, and I want to protect my drive system from this mud and dirt as it is the most delicate part of the bike, then I would put that drive system as far from the muck as possible.
That would be, on the right side of the bike.
There was ZERO thought of grinding (ha, good one) when bmx bikes were invented. Grinding didn't really start for many, many years later and has not part in that thought process.
I would say that what we call 'tradition' most likely had pretty firm roots for the decision that was made on the early bikes and it is likely that some prototype LSD bikes were made and it was determined that the RSD bikes protected the bike from the elements a bit more, so was the better choice in manufacturing.