I already said what I wanted to say.Nosmo wrote:What you want to say

Jon,c2jonw wrote:Lots of speculation here and of course this sort of feedback is all good information for us. What we know is that the HOC prototype (shown in the short video clip at the beginning of this thread) was very sensitive to ones rowing technique. About half the people that used it would get into a sort of selp-perpetuating oscilation that had them bumping from one end stop to the other, as demonstrated by the young woman in the short clip. Typically these people did not like the prototype. The other half had rowing styles that kept them moving slightly somewhere between the end stops but without bumping, and typically these people liked the prototype. So from that information we came up with the CRASH-B prototype, which fundamentally has the same drive mechanism but a different method of restraining the seat which is a lot more forgiving of rowing technique. We've shown this prototype at several coaches clinics and it has been used by numerous elite level athletes with mostly positive feedback all around. There's still a lot of work to fine tune the feel of it, and then even more work to get it to production, if we decide that's what we want to do. C2JonW
Actually Paul it doesn't clarify anything. Trust me on this.bloomp wrote:To clarify my point - the issue of a rowers center of mass is redundant - here are some pictures.
http://www.c2forum.com/viewtopic.php?p=128608#128608JRBJR wrote:bloomp,
I think you're correct: ... with proper rowing technique the shift should be quite small, only a few inches, causing the seat to essentially remain almost stationary with respect to the sliding erg.
John Rupp wrote:the center of gravity of the body is only slightly above the hips, i.e. slightly above the seat,
and does NOT move back and forth to any great degree on the slides, nor should it on the prototype.
Yeah, who is the stupid one now.bloomp wrote:Are you actually as stupid as you sound?
Bob, Yes, we did add weight to the stretcher assemblies of both the HOC and CRASH-B prototypes. We started out with them being fairly light, wanting to see how far we could push the idea of minimizing the moving mass. But something felt wrong- no momentum, perhaps- so we started adding weight. Both assemblies ended up at around 25 or 30 pounds.Thanks for the clarification. Something was said at the C-Bs that gave me the impression that the stretcher assembly might be weighted to give it more inertia. On thinking it over, I wondered if it was done to simulate the weight of a boat (about 30#). Is the stretcher assembly that heavy or did I just get the information screwed up? It was a busy, confusing time with lots of snatches of conversation going on, so I am not sure of what was said nor who said it. I would appreciate it if you could straighten me out on this.
On my short trial of the C-B prototype, I liked the feel of it very much and I hope that I am still around to use one if and when it gets into production.
Thanks for that, Jon. It is interesting that the experimentally derived weight, 25-30 pounds, is the same as the weight of a typical single shell.c2jonw wrote:
Bob, Yes, we did add weight to the stretcher assemblies of both the HOC and CRASH-B prototypes. We started out with them being fairly light, wanting to see how far we could push the idea of minimizing the moving mass. But something felt wrong- no momentum, perhaps- so we started adding weight. Both assemblies ended up at around 25 or 30 pounds.
Reports from our field testing continue to be positive. C2JonW