What are the advantages of owning a Unicycle, as opposed to owning a bicycle?
I can think of several:
- They are lighter and smaller than bikes
- Easier to maintain, fewer moving parts
- They provide good practice for balancing
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Sign up to join this communityWhat are the advantages of owning a Unicycle, as opposed to owning a bicycle?
I can think of several:
One less obvious advantage is that they are not a bicycle, legally speaking. So while you can't ride on the road in most places, you can take one on public transport and into buildings etc. I commuted to university on one for that reason - I could ride into my lectures :) For a while anyway, there's the "Moz Memorial Rule Against Unicycles" now.
They work a different set of muscles, and train a differet set of reflexes. Balance skills are useful to have, and the entertainment value of a unicycle should not be ignored. Both in the "I'm waiting, I know, I'll practice stairs" and the "look at me, put money in my hat" senses.
For commuting I found a 26" was ideal as a compromise between speed and size, although I ended up using a 20" a lot just for easy of parking. If I could have got the Schlumpf hub it would have been perfect.
Presumably a 50% reduction in punctures?
From an exercise standpoint, a unicycle works a much different set of muscles than a bicycle. You use a lot more core strength to maintain balance and steer.
A unicycle is almost the ultimate cross-mode transport system. I mix it with our trains and buses without restrictions (we have public transport policy that separates unis from bikes). I commonly put it in the back of the car when I go somewhere with my wife that is not parking friendly. I can carry the thing through shops and malls without any issues. It is easily stored under my desk at work. It is fine in winter if you have end-of-trip faciliities, better in fact than when I was capable of riding a bike.
Impressing your friends with your awesome skills should you master the thing? Potential work in the circus field? Vast improvement in balance?
On the downside... Lost skin, closer relations with your orthopedic man...
Good luck! I've always been rather balance-challenged.
More fun. I've ridden a uni for 30 year, and it feels like skiing or skating. Biking, for me anyway, is just boring.
Also, in regard to another post, unis now-a-days do have disc brakes.
Good for your posture and lower back I would have thought as you're engaging those muscles in order to balance.
Unicycling helps you get in touch with balance. Thank god for them.