SAFETY BICYCLE

1887 advertisement for a safety bicycle.
The 'safety bicycle' is a type of bicycle that became very popular beginning in the late 1880s. The first safety was invented by John Kemp Starley in 1885. "Safeties" are characterized by having a diamond-shaped frame, two wheels of identical - or nearly identical - size, and a chain-driven rear wheel.
The safety bicycle was a big improvement on the previous penny-farthing design which it replaced. The chain drive, coupling a large front cog (the chainring) to a small rear cog (the sprocket) to multiply the revolutions of the pedals, allowed for much smaller wheels, and replaced the need for the large, directly pedaled front wheel of the "penny-farthing" or "high ordinary". The smaller wheel gave a harder ride, thus hastening the replacement of solid tires with pneumatic ones. The safety made cycling much safer, and therefore much more popular, especially for women. The same basic design of bicycle is still in common use today.

Contents
See also
External Link

See also



Bicycle frame

History of the bicycle

External Link



Rover safety bicycle often thought of as the icon of safety bicycles.

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