Silly me, not posting a picture of my Mango. Here is a picture of Mango130 in front of Velomobile.nl; where I purchased it secondhand.
I skimmed a wooden pole today on my way to work. Luckily no obvious damage, not even scratches to the bodywork. It sounded horrobly loud though, I even felt the bike getting a knock. Come to think of it, I need to check the location where the suspention leg is held in place to the bodywork. The knock I heard & felt must have been the hub axle (since not even a scratch on the body). The picture below is a schematic, not exact the Mango's suspention, but good enough to illustrate my point of interest. The ellipse is the connection which I definatly need to check. It's likely the one taking the most abuse... I should make a habit of checking it more regulary; here in Belgium the roads are not always as forgiving as Mango130 would want them to be.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Monday, November 14, 2011
Foggy morning
Today was a misty morning. I went to work a bit earlier as usual since I had to make an early phone call. This meant it was nice and calm on the roads, a welcome plus due to the fog. Makes me wonder if I should install a fog tail light... I had planned on installing a brake signal; now I might consider combining this with a fog light. We'll see.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Test drive
Just returned from a short test drive. All is well. In fact, it's splendid! These velomobiles are excellent for cocooning in grim wether.
Saturday, November 12, 2011
22T sprocket
Eventually I ended up drilling the four holes in the sprocket myself. Quite a few washers needed grinding. Not the cleanest of all jobs, but happy to have done it.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Replacing axle
Prompt responce from Sinner, they would send me a replacement axle. One could argue that such a critical component should not fail. Still, it does Sinner credit that they did not make a fuzz out of sending a replacement axle. Free of charge. Keep in mind that this Mango is from 2008; in Europe warranty does not typically last as long. I did not have to wait long for the replacement part to arrive, all in all I'm happy with the service Sinner gave me.
Let's get cracking.
I applied some anti-seize to the axle in case I would have to remove this one someday. I don't know if I did a good thing with the anti-seize, but I figured it could'nt hurt. I hope the future will not prove otherwise.
Sinner adviced me to try to use the new axle to push the old out. Although this helps, I assisted myselve by 'devising' a pulling mechanism using a wrench.
Aligning the axle on the bolted side is a bit tricky, a small mirror helps as one can't look around the corner...
The axle-plate needs to be rotated into position; this is how I did it. Again, there are likely other and better methods.
A picture of the old axle where the axle retainer plate tore off
The testride will have to wait untill the weekend; I'm using the oppertunity to have the sprocket on the mid-axle taken care off. The standard holes in the sprocket are not wide enough to let the (don't-know-the-word) pass through. I don't have the tools myselve to drill such a large hole, through metal, with any precision. I hope I can find someone willing to do so tomorrow.
Up till know I've been riding with a 'workaround', yet this did not result in a proper chain alignment. I've been longing to fix this for a while now. The original 26 tooth sprocket had larger holes, I replaced it with a 22T one, in order to ease the climbing of some slopes.
Let's get cracking.
I applied some anti-seize to the axle in case I would have to remove this one someday. I don't know if I did a good thing with the anti-seize, but I figured it could'nt hurt. I hope the future will not prove otherwise.
Sinner adviced me to try to use the new axle to push the old out. Although this helps, I assisted myselve by 'devising' a pulling mechanism using a wrench.
Aligning the axle on the bolted side is a bit tricky, a small mirror helps as one can't look around the corner...
The axle-plate needs to be rotated into position; this is how I did it. Again, there are likely other and better methods.
A picture of the old axle where the axle retainer plate tore off
The testride will have to wait untill the weekend; I'm using the oppertunity to have the sprocket on the mid-axle taken care off. The standard holes in the sprocket are not wide enough to let the (don't-know-the-word) pass through. I don't have the tools myselve to drill such a large hole, through metal, with any precision. I hope I can find someone willing to do so tomorrow.
Up till know I've been riding with a 'workaround', yet this did not result in a proper chain alignment. I've been longing to fix this for a while now. The original 26 tooth sprocket had larger holes, I replaced it with a 22T one, in order to ease the climbing of some slopes.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Axle trouble
Last Saturday I had a ride planned together with a friend. The intend was twofold:
- I needed to get out of a house refurbishment dip, figured a short ride might clear the head
- I commute twice a week over a one-way distance of 18km. This is a bit short to get a somewhat healty condition.
My first post....
I'm a firm beleaver in the use of a universal language. As it stands, on the net, this seems to be the English language so here we go...
Figured I'd start a blog relating the adventures of Mango 130. I'll start with a bit of history on Mango 130.
Figured I'd start a blog relating the adventures of Mango 130. I'll start with a bit of history on Mango 130.
- Build March 2008 by Sinner
- Obtained in 2010 as a second hand velomobile via ww.velomobiel.nl. The original owner is unknown to me. I'm interested in the name of the former owner(s) though; so if you happen to know..... please contact me.
- I love cycling it ever since :)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)