| |
Main
Date: 17 May 2007 22:40:26
From:
Subject: Intentionally indexed headset
|
This patent diagram shows a flat upright spring in an old headset, intended to encourage the "velocipede's" front wheel to stay straight: http://i1.tinypic.com/4orrn8m.jpg In the patents of that era, "velocipede" means what we'd call a bicycle with a fairly normal frame and wheels, as opposed to a highwheeler. The hidden spring deliberately produces the rough equivalent of our modern unintentional headset indexing, but the cunning inventor of 1887 left no room for debate about the mechanism. The patent was assigned to the Pope company, the largest U.S. bike manufacturer, but I don't know how many Pope "velocipedes" ever used this hidden self-straightening spring. Cheers, Carl Fogel
|
|
| |
Date: 20 May 2007 21:49:20
From: Werehatrack
Subject: Re: Intentionally indexed headset
|
On Thu, 17 May 2007 22:40:26 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net may have said: >This patent diagram shows a flat upright spring in an old headset, >intended to encourage the "velocipede's" front wheel to stay straight: > >http://i1.tinypic.com/4orrn8m.jpg > >In the patents of that era, "velocipede" means what we'd call a >bicycle with a fairly normal frame and wheels, as opposed to a >highwheeler. > >The hidden spring deliberately produces the rough equivalent of our >modern unintentional headset indexing, but the cunning inventor of >1887 left no room for debate about the mechanism. > >The patent was assigned to the Pope company, the largest U.S. bike >manufacturer, but I don't know how many Pope "velocipedes" ever used >this hidden self-straightening spring. Note that the drawing appears to be of a design that had a vertical steerer with effectively negative trail. It may have used tiller steering. With that steering geometry, the self-centering spring would have been more than an oddity; it would have been needed. Note also that the steerer design sharply limits the amount of wheel deflection possible; the bike would have been a pain to maneuver through a crowded area without picking it up and carrying it...and with all that wall thickness (assuming the drawings are close to production designs) the resulting unit would probably have been *very* heavy. -- My email address is antispammed; pull WEEDS if replying via e-mail. Typoes are not a bug, they're a feature. Words processed in a facility that contains nuts.
|
| |
Date: 18 May 2007 18:09:18
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Intentionally indexed headset
|
carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > This patent diagram shows a flat upright spring in an old headset, > intended to encourage the "velocipede's" front wheel to stay straight: > http://i1.tinypic.com/4orrn8m.jpg > In the patents of that era, "velocipede" means what we'd call a > bicycle with a fairly normal frame and wheels, as opposed to a > highwheeler. > The hidden spring deliberately produces the rough equivalent of our > modern unintentional headset indexing, but the cunning inventor of > 1887 left no room for debate about the mechanism. > The patent was assigned to the Pope company, the largest U.S. bike > manufacturer, but I don't know how many Pope "velocipedes" ever used > this hidden self-straightening spring. Clever way to do that. Some bicycles have a spring between downtube and mudguard. Not for 'handling' but rather to keep the front wheel from flopping when parked. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
|
|