When you’re a kid, riding with your hands off the bars is something done for thrills, for style, and to impress chicks. As an older, wiser Velominatus, it can be a handy maneuvre to aid removing or donning extra clothing, taking a feed from your pockets, and to impress women (because that’s how adults refer to chicks). Get it right and it’s the most Pro of moves; get it wrong, and there’s little chance the nurse picking the gravel from your face will be impressed.
Surprisingly, many Cyclists are inadequately equipped in this fine, yet fairly basic and useful art. If memory serves correctly, it was one of the first things I learned to do on a bike, right after balancing and pedalling, and just before wobbling and face-planting. Anyone could ride along with one hand on the bars, waving at the girls or flipping the bird at the guys, but if you could sit bolt upright and give the ‘up yours’ sign then you were a true badass. Making sure you could haul your bad ass out of there before being dragged off the bike and beaten to a pulp helped develop sprinting skills which would come in handy later in your cycling odyssey.
Another, more practical use of riding no hands was to remove the long sleeved flannelette shirt (aka the ‘flanno‘) so fashionable in the day and deftly tie it around one’s waist, hopefully without getting it caught in the rear wheel and necessitating another trip to the casualty ward to be embarrassed in front of that same nurse yet again. Getting the six buttons undone and the sleeves tied together in a double knot in under ten seconds was the stuff of legend, and only Mick Johnson could do it that quickly, surprisingly so as his IQ was roughly the same number as the time it took him to complete the task (or write his name). How he never went on to bag a Pro contract still baffles me.
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While we can see clearly from the photos that the modern Pro is just that, professional, and would never use their arms or hands for anything but the cultivation of a clean image for the sport, riding no hands can still be a useful skill for the rest of us. Having to stop the whole bunch so you can peel off your arm warmers, hat or vest is not only inconvenient, it’s asking for a mini-pump beating. To avoid such ignominy, here are a few basic tips to help with getting your gear off (or on).
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Used to ride handsfree a lot when I was a kid, but only recently began to practice for the very reason of clothing removal. Got a nice section I can practice pulling the bidon and supping handsfree on each commute. Granted it is right beside the motorway, and I can't help but think the drivers must think I'm a showoff douche as I pass them, hands off, while they are stuck in traffic. Oh well, I'm at home before they are...
For those wanting to try, I find I have to shift my weight back over the back of the seat to sit level, then you steer with the hips. I was surprised how straight tracking my race geo Ridley is when compared to my commuter actually, once you are in the sweet spot. Watch for winds, but not too much of a prob. My safe/controllable pace seems to be about 25kph or under.
The other day when forced to drive to work, I saw no less than 4 other people ride no hands on the cycleway. The standard of bike tended to be rusty MTB in each case. One was riding nohands while yapping into his cellphone on speaker with earphones in! Skillz to pay the billz yo...
@frank Reckon the R3 had a faster steering front end than some of your other bikes.
@frank Don't get me wrong I love no hands but some of these bikes, like your R3 just don't like going there and I do not think its the alignment, more the angles of fork/frame, light weight and lack of subsequent stability in the front end. I think these issues might lead to a bunch of people being very tentative and leading to the above statements.
Obviously this is not an issue in the pro ranks and maybe I just get wimpy when they do not behave like steel?
@Rob
The twitchy forks that make our carbon steeds handle with such aplomb also make them a bitch to keep on a line sans hands...there is much to be said for the mannered handling of the bikes of our youth.
Needed more practice.
@sthilzy
Damn! Embed didn't work!
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/2395910/bike_race_victory_fail/
@sthilzy holy mother of suck. That man will always live with that. Celebrating too early in my opinion. There was another similar finish at an ironman competition. I will see if I can't track down the video
Two no hands experiences:
As a young lad riding my dragster over a speed bump and the front wheel parting company. No lawyer tabs in those days.
Doing a big victory salute winning my first B grade crit at 16 and almost falling off.
One hand off the bars...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KlLi0Hrx9QE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KlLi0Hrx9QE