My initiation into the obsessive world of recumbent building began with this wooden wonder. Not (yet) being versed in the art of welding I realised this would pose a significant handicap to creating my own version of some of the home built masterpieces I had seen on the internet. But being reasonably competent at working with wood, and having lots of odd bits of wood and stuff lying around, I acquired a thrown-away child's bike which I hacked up for parts and key frame elements - notably the front wheel, fork, and down tube - and the result was this.
A keen eye might notice that the chain is on the LHS of the frame. This was simply because I did not yet possess a tool for removing the crankset from the bottom bracket, so I had to make do with it being on the wrong side when I exploited the down tube as my front boom. The bike didn't yet have any gears shifters, so the problems that a LHS chain line would create at the rear sprocket for changing gears didn't arise.
Note also that I am already experimenting with an intermediate sprocket cluster as part of a future gearing mechanism. I thought this was quite ingenious, and no doubt original. I was soon to discover - as with almost every original, cunning, and unique new idea that I had - that someone else had got there first quite some time ago!
This model was - surprisingly enough - able to be ridden with ease, and I spent some time acclimatising to the novel experience of the recumbent position by riding around an outdoor basketball court. I was soon confident enough to do U-turns and figures of eight. An early highpoint was when two young lads, who happened to be present during one of my test rides, asked me "where did you buy that mister?".
Perhaps this empirical discovery was what gave birth to my cynicism and mistrust of ever believing anything of any technical nature about bikes gleaned from bike journalists or self-proclaimed experts on the internet.
Perhaps not the most elegant of contraptions but, as you can see, I'm quite chuffed with my new toy!