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80s Linear Speed Bike--Only Three He-Men Have Been Able To Ride Mine.

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Goldenrod

I live for the CABE
My bike is at the bottom of this thread. Please note that the steering is under your bottom. Imagine riding a log and then putting your legs up onto the log. You roll over --right? Now try pedaling forward to keep it all up. Turning is like turning an oil tanker because of its length. The later ones look wimpy and easier ride but mine folds and all the parts are adjustable along the rail. It is fun to ride but the exposed sprocket will bite into your leg is you a dumb enough the wear shorts. A prototype like mine went 65 MPH and won $20,000 prize. They were made in Guttenburg, Iowa and cost several thousand dollars. Mine was ridden by an old man in a parades around Lombard, Illinois. Real difficult because of starting and stopping. The inventor drown a few miles from this bike while diving on a Sturgeon Bay Wisconsin wreck carrying hundreds of 1929 Nash autos. After beating myself up learning how to ride it , I had to buy it. at a bike show in 1994 with pocket change. I should take it to Porland and park it next to the first aid station. One was ridden on UTube and another man took one around the USA in the 1990s. A large, strong guy broke one bike in the back of the frame that is why the picture and comment about strong frame.
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Linear History​

Linear Recumbents began in Iowa in the mid 1980’s. Here is a timeline with highlights:
2014

We introduce eight reflective colors.
2012
The Linear Roadster, Linear Limo and Linear Limo LR are in stock. Most sizes and colors are ready to ship in under a week!
The new Linear Roadster SWB USS Recumbent Bike was reviewed August 18, 2011 by Brian Ball from ‘BentRiderOnline! ~ “The best handling USS bike I’ve ever ridden.”
And in January of 2012 the Roadster went on to win the prestigious
2011 ‘Bentrider Recumbent Bike of the Year!
2012
  • In January the Linear Roadster is named 2011 ‘Bentrider Recumbent Bike of the Year!
  • We add a 900 sq ft manufacturing and storage facility and move in.
  • We hire a full time Production Manager who is a degreed engineer
  • We increased our frame fatigue testing program
  • We make our largest investment to date in production equipment
  • We introduced the Linear Limo LR (low rider) to fit riders down to 5′ 4″
  • We introduced the OSS option on the Linear Roadster
  • We introduced the XL (extra light) component group option, bringing the Roadster’s weight to 30 lb.
We now have models to fit riders from 5′ 4″ to 8′ tall and up to 275 lbs.
2011
The new Linear Roadster is in production. Shipments to customers began in February.
2010
Great comfort, Best handling, Good value. – 2010 Bentrider review
  • Linear moves into a newer, larger building in May. The SWB project progresses again this year and gains the name “Roadster”.
2009
The SWB project has gone through 4 iterations and is now a 20″x26″ with dual disk brakes, 27 speeds and a RANS seat. Feedback is collected from thousands of miles of test riding by our staff and hundreds of customers. Progress slows as renovation begins on our new 3500 sq. ft. building.
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The Linear Roadster SWB
2008
Linear runs out of space and purchases a larger building which needs renovating.
2007
Linear Recumbents began development of a new Linear Short Wheel Base (SWB) Recumbent Bike to replace the old Linear Sonic. Our first demo bike had dual 20″ tires, 24 speeds and dual V-brakes. It was well received by the crowd at the 2007 Bentride.
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2006
We went back to FEA and increased the strength and stiffness of the new frame a bit more. In the summer of 2006 we sold the first Linear Limo 3.0 to Chris Kelley.
Check out the Linear Limo 3.0 Recumbent Touring Bike.
2002
In late 2002 Linear manufacturing went out of business. Bicycle Man llc bought the assets of Linear Mfg Inc. and began redesigning aluminum recumbents using modern engineering technology. Production of recumbents bearing the Linear name is begun in Western NY where Linear Recumbent Bikes are alive and well today.
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The first 1,000 pounds of Linear inventory.
Since then Peter have been working with Senior Engineering students and professors from Alfred University; SUNY Alfred and Perdue University to improve Linear Recumbent Bikes. The Linear LWB (Long Wheel Base) was first to be redesigned beginning development in 2003. The frame design was begun with computer FEA testing. A prototype was built and put through static and dynamic tests.
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First prototype, Linear Limo 3.0
The most fun part of this testing was attaching strain gauges and accelerometers to the frame and a laptop computer behind the seat. The bike was then raced through potholes, off curbs and up hills by a 240 lb rider. After analyzing the data we felt confident enough to loan it to a 250 lb rider who rode the Limo 800 miles then strapped on an additional 50 lbs of gear and rode from Maine to Georgia. Upon completion of the trip the Linear Limo 3.0 was shipped back to Western NY and stripped to the frame to undergo a dye penetrant test looking for fatigue cracks. A certified technician?s report found that the New Linear Limo 3.0 passed nuclear specs.
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FEA software testing new Linear design
2001
Late in the summer of 2001 Dave Bures purchased Linear from Steve Hansel. Dave found the bike business less profitable than he had expected. Dave sold much of the remaining inventory to The Bicycle Man in late 2001.
Linear Manufacturing went out of business in 2002. Bicycle Man llc bought their physical assets, intellectual property and trade name and moved them from Guttenberg, Iowa to Western New York where Linear Recumbents have been redesigned for strength and durability and are back in Production Today!
1999

“Dirk Kann, 52, passed away on September 4, 1999 while on a deep water scuba dive in Lake Michigan. Dirk’s death was definitely a freak of God type of thing. He was an avid diver and a very respected person amongst the community. His passing is definitely a true loss.”
~ Tricia at Linear Mfg. Inc.
1991
Steve Hansel bought Linear Mfg. Inc. in 1991 when Dirk Kann’s other business ventures picked up.
1980’s
It began when Dirk Kann and Steve Leitgen designed what would become the Linear LWB. Dirk went on to manufacture Linear Recumbents when his aluminum fabricating business was slow in the mid 80’s.
The first production Linears (~1985) had over seat handlebars that looked like they would be at home on a Harley chopper. We have the first Linear ever sold in our collection, as well as the first with US. Stop in and see them if you are ever in Western NY! They were comfortable and handled well on the road but were difficult to manage in sharp turns. They had so much “tiller” that to make a sharp right turn you had to put your left hand on the right handlebar! They soon added the familiar USS handlebar which quickly became much more popular and the OSS was discontinued.
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A very early Linear Iowa Prototype, experimenting with rear wheel attachment (& suspension?)
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Three photos of another variation of the rear wheel attachment.​

The first Linear models had over seat handlebars that looked like they would be at home on a Harley chopper. They were comfortable and handled well on the road but were difficult to manage in sharp turns. They had so much “tiller” that to make a sharp right turn you had to put your left hand on the right handlebar! They soon added the familiar USS handlebar which quickly became much more popular and the OSS was discontinued.
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This prototype has recognizable rear frame “chainplates”, the familiar rear wheel attachment.
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Promotional photo of early Linear machines.
The serial number of a Kann’s Linear (or Iowa Linear) is just a few digits compared to the long serial numbers on newer Linear frames. You can tell an original Kann Linear by the short serial number. To find the serial number, look on the bottom of the main frame beam behind the front fork. We are now hand inscribing short serial #s on the Linear Recumbents we are completing.
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Early USS Linear with Kann employee Randy Heller.

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You forgot to mention Dirk Kann's body was found 10 years later on, perfectly preserved in the cold Lake Michigan waters and intact in his diving suit. Kann's main buisness was manufacturing trailers.

I've owned 2 of the Iowa Linears. Slow, flexible, folds up so they will fit in the trunk of a small car. I raced one at a HPR midwest race and finished nearly last. Just so slow. Hard to even keep it going at 15 mph. The frontal area/wind drag is huge. Not that hard to ride if you have a decent sense of balance. My somewhat klutsty wife even rode one (once). It does take a bit of learning to get started. Crank up, pedal hard and go. Starting out at slow speed just doesn't work with LWB recumbents. Kann made them with different length frames to fit taller/shorter riders.
 
You forgot to mention Dirk Kann's body was found 10 years later on, perfectly preserved in the cold Lake Michigan waters and intact in his diving suit. Kann's main buisness was manufacturing trailers.

I've owned 2 of the Iowa Linears. Slow, flexible, folds up so they will fit in the trunk of a small car. I raced one at a HPR midwest race and finished nearly last. Just so slow. Hard to even keep it going at 15 mph. The frontal area/wind drag is huge. Not that hard to ride if you have a decent sense of balance. My somewhat klutsty wife even rode one (once). It does take a bit of learning to get started. Crank up, pedal hard and go. Starting out at slow speed just doesn't work with LWB recumbents. Kann made them with different length frames to fit taller/shorter riders.
That's what is great about the CABE, opinions and additional facts.
 
You have your casual bicycle enthusiast, the passionate cyclist, the over-the-top nutball...

And then there is the recumbent crowd, those who prefer seats that look like lawn furniture, who try to explain how climbing is actually more fun sitting (or lying) down, and who think nothing of linking three standard chains together.

Of all the bicycle folk out there, I find the recumbent crowd the most perplexing. Most are also the most affable and accepting of all cycling breeds out there. I guess persecution breeds tolerance.
 
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