In Memoriam: The Funny Bike

Laurent Fignon's Hour Record Machine

We gather here today to pay our respects to one of the most exciting developments the Cycling world has ever witnessed: the funny bike.

For seventy years, the evolution of the bicycle was marked by incremental change; improvements to brakes, more gears, and better shifting followed one another as the sport grudgingly continued its slow journey towards progress and modernization.

Then, in an instant, disruption. Change. In the years prior to 1984, time trial machines were little more than finely-tuned road machines. But suddenly, spurred on by Francesco Moser’s success in breaking the Hour Record aboard a radical machine with double disc wheels and cow-horn handlebars, we entered a decade of innovation.

In the blink of an eye, we had broken from the shackles of traditional thinking and were suddenly free to think about a bicycle without constraint. Riders appeared in the start house with fairings attached to their saddles and bars mounted below the top tube. Riders toed up to the start line with broom sticks mounted across the drops of their handlebars. Aero bars appeared and with them, the triangular frame design that had graced our machines for three-quarters of a century disappeared. In the span of ten short years, time trial positions went from the standard tuck to the Super Man.

Then, in a crafty maneuver which demonstrates that the UCI’s incompetence is not a recent development, new regulations were introduced which effectively killed innovation in bike design. The UCI regulated the position of the bars, the saddle, the size of the wheels, the design of the frame; even the shape of the tubes are currently highly scrutinized. The UCI even offers an exorbitantly expensive frame certification process.

Join me now, as we examine some examples of the most innovative machines our sport will ever see.

A-Merckx.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Funny Bike/”/]

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • You have credited a photo of the superman position to Chris Boardman when in actual fact it is Graeme Obree!

  • I think it was 90 or 91, Thierry Marie won the Tour de France prologue on a bike similar to pic # 4 but with the saddle/aerofoil in the main picture. In fact, it might have been slightly larger! I also think the bike in #4 might ave been commercially available as I have old Miroir du Cyclismes with Gitane adverts featuring the bike. Clearly the UCI were MUCH more lenient in those days . . .

  • The Bike Show podcast from Resonance FM hosted by Jack Thurston had a two-part interview with Mike Burrows, designer of Chris Boardman's Lotus, and included an interesting discussion of bicycle innovation. It is definitely worth checking out. Mr Burrows doesn't mince his words as to his feelings on the UCI.

  • @wiscot
    Thierry Marie! He is the rider I was thinking of for showing up at the start house with a saddle fairing. I bet it actually slowed him down because it didn't create a seal between him and his back - it was probably little more than a wind shovel.

    I guess it does seal a bit better than I remember...according to the second pic. But I remember seeing video of him on the tip of his saddle with that fairing dragging behind him like a parachute!

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