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About 4 miles away from me, there is a bike hire shop that has tandems. I'm trying to work out the logistics of getting the tandem to my house to pick up the other rider.

I'm an experienced cyclist, but have never ridden a tandem before. It's not convenient for both of us to go to the shop. Is riding a tandem particularly difficult for one person?

I suppose I'll get the bus there...

Ne Mo
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    I roller bladed 10 km to pick up my new tandem, then rode home with the blades in a backpack. I got a lot of useful info from http://www.gtgtandems.com/tech/newriders.html – Criggie Mar 15 '16 at 00:41
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    As long as you pick the front saddle instead of the one in the back, you should be fine :-) – Mast Mar 15 '16 at 15:15
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    Other posters have answered for adults, but as a pre-teen I tried to ride a tandem solo without much success: it was just too heavy. So it depends on you :) – Max Mar 15 '16 at 22:41
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    So its a year later - have you succeeded in hiring a tandem and riding it to the pickup? – Criggie May 13 '16 at 04:52
  • I haven't got around to it yet. Only just persuaded my better half to try and ride on the normal bicycle I built for her, so baby steps ;) – Ne Mo May 13 '16 at 07:04

6 Answers6

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I have a 1990 steel racing tandem, and sadly it gets more miles solo than with a stoker.

The main differences between tandems and solo bikes apply when riding a tandem on your own (rear wheel cuts corners more, you can't bunny hop) but points to note:

  • Cars may not see the rear of your bike, and may not anticipate the extra space required when pulling up or allowing room to turn.
  • Steering is a bit odd - it may be unique to mine, but if the solocaptain doesn't commit to a corner with enough lean, the bike tries to stand up straight and go straight.
  • Braking - its still possible to raise the back wheel clear off the ground when doing an aggressive brake with just a captain. And the stoker's bars may get in the way of your backside if you lean backwards.
  • Drag brake is less effective with no stoker. So big descents you have to ride more like a solo bike.
  • You may get heckled with "Your passenger fell off!" so have a witty retort like "Bugger - so that's why she stopped nagging!" or "Damn I thought we were going slower than normal!"

Speed is generally not an issue - I've topped 40 km/h solo on my tandem, and the previous owner exceeded 70 km/h on it on a race, with two riders.

enter image description here

Criggie
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    A race tandem? Awesome! I want a ride. On a serious note, I did not notice a tendency to "stand up", mine is 80ies city bike style one. – chichak Mar 15 '16 at 00:51
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    Yeah, I've ridden upright tandems solo, and I've seen one that had a tube over the seat so the owner could carry an extra 4 "rear" panniers. I rode my tandem recumbent trike solo a few times, but that was very heavy. It worked fine apart from that. – Móż Mar 15 '16 at 03:16
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    Great answer. The main point to watch out for is that the rear brake will be almost useless without the weight of a stoker. With a stoker it's better than the rear brake of a solo. – James Bradbury Mar 15 '16 at 08:04
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    The cages (if installed) on the rear pedals might hit the ground. Some riders carry pants elastic bands to link them to the front pedals and keep them horizontal. – Carel Mar 15 '16 at 08:10
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    +1. The "witty" comments are probably the biggest issue! – user_1818839 Mar 15 '16 at 11:45
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    @BrianDrummond The trick is to have a couple of general purpose answers pre-prepared, ready to say. Feel free to swipe my examples, or if the heckler is attractive and you're single, ask "do you want a ride?" – Criggie Mar 15 '16 at 22:15
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    Sounds like a nightmare when you're standing on the pedals, you'd be constantly shifting in and out of phase. –  Mar 17 '16 at 11:11
  • @blokedownthepub I don't understand your comment - the timing chain keeps both cranks spinning at the same speed. The only way to get out of phase would be to intentionally fit the timing chain wrong, or to use different sized timing gears. It doesn't show on my photo above, but the timing chain is on the left side and completely separate to the chain on the right. In fact my timing chain is a stout 1/8" and the drive chain is a 3/32". – Criggie May 13 '16 at 04:45
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Doesn't seem like too big a deal.

It should be similar to having someone on the back who's not pedaling, only lighter and faster.

BSO rider
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    I love the second one. – gerrit Mar 15 '16 at 11:13
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    I'm not convinced the third one isn't photoshopped. The make FS mtb tandems? – Holloway Mar 15 '16 at 12:46
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    I recognise the location of that first one! It's behind the catedral in Helsinki. https://goo.gl/E2nQLm Oh, and looking more closely at the rider's pointy shoes and hair, that must be a Leningrad Cowboy [fan]! Edit: Found the source: http://www.prime-junta.net/gallery/galleries/cowboys/IMG_2115.html – Hugo Mar 15 '16 at 14:32
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    @Holloway: http://calfeedesign.com/calfee-ellsworth-witness/ – whatsisname Mar 15 '16 at 18:54
  • I'd like to see one second after the third picture was taken [snap] – Matt Wilko Mar 17 '16 at 11:42
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I have a tandem and I have ridden it solo. It's not hard from a handling point of view, and at least with mine it's easier than riding tandem – it's just riding a bike with an exceptionally long rear end. Sure, more friction and a lot more weight, but overall something any cyclist with a tiny amount of experience can handle.

David Richerby
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chichak
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Riding a tandem solo isn't a big deal. It's just a big long heavy bike; as others have said easier than riding a tandem with a stoker if they're not putting much power in.

Apart from the "funny" comments you get, the only actual issue I've noticed is that you don't get so much grip on the back wheel without the weight over it. I tried standing on the pedals going up a hill and found the wheel would spin.

Chris Emerson
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  • Same problem coming down a gradient solo while using a drag brake. There's less weight on the rear so it can skid easier. Not good in a fast downhill turn. – Criggie May 13 '16 at 04:50
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It will certainly be more difficult than riding a standard bicycle. Although I don't feel like it would be impossible by any means. The factors to consider are:

Weight - the Tandem weighs a lot more than a standard bicycle

Wind - larger surface area means more effect from crosswinds

Length - This will play very little with the transport as far as riding it to a friends house, other than turning, but plays a major factor in future transport by car or bus

Tandems have a pilot, and a stoker, the rear rider being the stoker, and all steering is done by the pilot or front riding. Therefor the stoker is only there to help out with pedaling and enjoy the ride.

So yes it will be more difficult but I wouldn't rule it entirely impossible. You will look lonely however ;)

Nate W
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It's usually easier than with a partner. I've been on one home-welded tandem where the front and back pedal cogs had different number of teeth and thus were not synchronized. That posed a problem for leaning into curves since the reflex of putting the inner pedal up did not match with the other pedal pair.

It's astonishing how much of a nuisance this can end up being (and when going solo, you had no warning). I don't think that this happens with a stock tandem however.

user25032
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  • That would be hard to take off as well - normally the stoker is seated and does the first power stroke while the captain gets on. You're right normally the link chain is synchronised. – Criggie Mar 15 '16 at 22:18