As was discussed in the first part one of this series, the
Draisienne seated scooter, many of the aspects of the modern bicycle were
realized with one quantum leap of inventive genius. The obvious shortcoming of
the design was that the vehicle could move forward no faster than the rider
could move his leg backward. The running-style leg kick propulsion needed to be
replaced.
What may not have been realized by the would-be inventors of
the time was a mechanism was needed that would reduce the speed of limb motion
and allow use of greater limb force. The assumption here is that the arms, the
legs of both would be used to propel the vehicle.
In hindsight, a crank attached to a wheel is such an obvious
and simple solution, one wonders why it took almost 50 years after the
Draisienne to be incorporated. As is the case with many simple solutions to
problems, they are derived from more complex predecessors. The crank was a
piece of a more complex drive mechanism.
The first recorded attempt to add non-running propulsion to
a Draisienne was by Lewis Gompertz in 1821.
Mr. Gompertz added a rocking crank with a gear sector which
drove a pinion gear attached to the front wheel by a one-way clutch. Although
this approach as a technical dead end, it is interesting for two reasons. It
was the first case where the rider had to propel and steer a bicycle with the
same mechanism. This would become a recurrent theme for inventors trying to add
arm power to the bicycle. The one-way clutch the drive used is also of interest
since the stresses associated with ratchet-type devices are very high due to
the small size pawls reacting large forces.
The next attempt at adding non-running power to the bicycle
was by Kirkpatrick McMillan in 1839. While McMillan’s invention was also a dead
end, a similar drive system would be the direct antecedent of the crank drive.
The drive would also be resurrected numerous times by would-be bicycle
innovators.
Both Gompertz and McMillan’s approaches reflect the thinking
that what was needed was a mechanism to convert linear motion to rotary motion.
The arms or legs moved in large arcs which approximated linear motion and the
bicycle’s wheel rotated. This thinking overlooked the fact that arms and also
legs could comfortably move through rotary motions.
The classic approach for converting linear to rotary motion
is known as a crank-slider mechanism, which was used in steam engines and later
internal-combustion engines.
Since a stable sliding link associated with this mechanism
is difficult to build without incurring undesirable frictional losses, a long
rocker link is often substituted for the slider when pure linear motion is not
required. (The kinematics guru at the U. of Wisconsin, John J. Uicker Jr.,
often said “Never use a slider if you can use a pivoting link”.)
McMillan used a
crank-rocker mechanism to drive his bicycle. McMillan mounted his pedals on the
rocker link. Often, when a crank-rocker mechanism is used for human-powered
propulsion, the pedals are attached the connecting rod. Now various pedal paths
can be obtained with mounting the pedal on this link. If the pedal is mounted
in position A, the pedals go in a circle. If the pedals are mounted in position
B, the pedals go in an arc. If pedals are mounted in a location between A and B
the pedal path is an asymmetric tear-drop shape, a hybrid of the arc and the
circle.
In a typical bicycle-development scenario, the next and
final step in bicycle propulsion occurs in 1861. One story relates that Pierre
Michaux, a builder of perambulators, invalid carriages and three-wheel
velocipedes, added pedal cranks to a broken Draisienne he was repairing.
During the period between McMillan’s bicycle and Michaux’s
bicycle there were other wheeled human-powered vehicles being built. Four wheel
vehicles called velocipedes (not to be confused with the term applied to the
later Michaux-style bicycle) were being produced.
One such velocipede, made by Willard Sawyer, may have
provided Michaux with the idea of mounting pedal cranks directly to the front
wheel of a Draisienne.
Sawyer used crank-rocker mechanisms to drive his
velocipedes. The cranks were double-sided allowing the connecting rods to be
mounted between the wheels. In some cases the cranks drove the rear wheels and
the rocker links were in front. In these cases the straps to hold the feet were
near the rocker links and consequently the feet moved essentially back and forth
along with the rocker link. In other cases, like the vehicle in the photo
above, the cranks drove the front wheels and the rocker links were located in
the rear. The foot straps were located close enough to the cranks that the feet
essentially moved in near-circular paths. In fact, with drive mechanisms
oriented in this fashion, the connecting rod acted like a pedal, providing a
pivot between the foot and the crank.
Since Michaux worked on velocipedes of this type, it is not
a stretch to assume he saw this type of mechanism with the double-sided cranks
attached to the two drive wheels and extrapolated the idea of a single-sided
cranks attached to a single wheel with pedals replacing the connecting rods.
And that, as they say, is history.
Pedal cranks are simpler and more efficient than the
crank-rocker mechanism. Nevertheless, the crank-rocker mechanism will reappear
in the final stage of bicycle evolution, the development of the safety bicycle.
Before we leave this second part of the technical history of
the bicycle, let’s take a parting look at the crank rocker mechanism but with a
few substitutions. We will reuse the pedal cranks attached to the wheel. In the
role of the rocker link we will use the rider’s upper leg and in the role of
the connecting rod we will use the combination of the rider’s lower leg and
foot. (Since there is often not much motion between the foot and lower leg, for
the purposed of this exercise we will consider the pair a single link.) So the
conventional bicycle is still propelled by a crank-rocker mechanism, but with
the rider providing two of the links.
So the crank-pedal method of bicycle propulsion
has endured not only because of its simplicity but also because of its
efficiency.
I mentioned the efficiency of the pedal-crank-drive approach
when compared to other approaches. The efficiency stems from two effects.
First, the thigh, shin and crank mechanism has a relatively
constant kinetic energy associated with it. I am referring to the energy stored
in the moving thigh and shin. In mid-stroke the thighs are rotating fastest
while the shins are rotating slowest. Conversely, at the top and bottom of the
stroke where the thighs reached their extremes of travel and have stopped
rotating, the shins are rotating their fastest. This near-constant kinetic
energy of this system allows for extremely high pedaling cadences. Cadences of
300rpm have been recorded, five revolutions per sec., by Reg Harris, the famous
British track cyclist. Harris had an amazingly muscular lower body and, as a
result, a lot of kinetic energy stored in this spinning legs.
The second effect is that the pedal-crank mechanism allows
for power production to be pulsatile as opposed to continuous. Each leg
produces power over approximately 25% of the stroke (this assumes the rider is
only pushing down on the pedals and not pulling up, but even so, these two
motions utilize different muscle groups.) I have mentioned in previous posts that power
production is more efficient with a work-rest cycle instead of a constant work
cycle. The is probably due to the fact that the rest period allows for the
aerobic energy sources in the muscle to be replaced easier than if the muscle
has no rest period. (More on the biomechanics and bioenergetics of human power
production in an upcoming post…)
Hephaestus
Thanks for sharing some historical facts about bike. Hope it will help to understand the mechanism and to get more info.
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