User:Ellis759/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

IceTrack Cycling is a bicycle racing sport usually held on 400m speed skating ice ovals. However any ice sheet can be used including ice hockey rinks and frozen lakes etc.

History[edit]

The sport of cycling on ice is propably as old as the sport of cycling and Icetrack cycling has many similarities to Track Cycling [1]. There are many examples of bikes that have been built or addapted to cope with the hard and slippery surface of ice. Usually practiced in places where a winter freeze turns lakes into inviting sheets of ice, annual events attract all types of ice bikes and competitors. Various ice rinks also host (annual) events. In the Netherlands, Icetrack cycling is developing rapidly due to the availability of standard ice bikes, making the sport much more accessable. The term icetrack is specifically used for cycling on ice suitable for skating on (i.e. not on snow or rough ice).

Equipment[edit]

Icetrack bike

Many types of bike have been tried over the years. The current standard bikes use one drive wheel at the back, a steering skate at the front and a cornering skate out to the right.

The Drive wheel is a 20" bicycle wheel with derailleur gears. Various tyres can be selected to suit the ice surface. Spikes are not used on a 400m ice oval.

The Steering Skate is ground to a profile which ensures the bike turns when the skate is turned - the skate being attached to handelbars operated by the user.

The Cornering Skate provides the force needed to get the bike round the left hand corners at either end of the ice oval.

The user sits in a recumbent position to ensure a low centre of gravity on the slippery ice.

Race formats[edit]

IceTrack Cycling standard 400m oval markings

Icetrack Cycling events fit into two broad categories, Timed/Individual races and Multiple bike races.

Timed races use the same format as speed skating events[2] . Various distances between 500m and 10,000m are completed against the clock, with a maximum of 2 competitors on the ice at any one time. Many ice ovals include a wire loop embedded in the ice along the finish line which can detect the passing of a transponder attached to the competitor, thus providing automated timing (often linked to the internet).

Multiple bike races of up to 20 bikes use a Standing Start from a grid with races held over 3, 5 or 9 laps. The position on the start grid is decided based on a timed qualifying flying lap.

Keirin[3]. The bikes are also used to start a Keirin race for speed skating (replacing the Derny in a velodrome. In a Keirin for skaters, the bike starts on the opposite side of the oval and the skaters then start from a standing start as the bike passes them. The bike then regulates the speed, which increases over 2 laps, before slowing and moving to the left. The skaters then sprint the last lap to the finish. Any number of skaters between 6 and 16 can take part in a race, depending on the local club. Championship races have 8 competitors.

Track records[edit]

The current record for 1 flying lap of a 400m ice oval stands at 34.36s, set in November 2013 in Assen, NL

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Cycling Track Equipment and History". Retrieved 7 August 2012.
  2. ^ (in Dutch) Wat is Langebaanschaatsen, KNSB.nl
  3. ^ "History of Keirin Racing". Keirin Cycle Culture. Retrieved August 4, 2012.

External links[edit]



Category: cycling