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The information below is straight off of the DISRAELI GEARS UK Website. The Derailleur is NOS but shows signs of storage wear and tare. If you take a good look are the jockey wheels you'll see that they have never been used. I might have the black rubber piece that goes over the drop out hanger but it's only used for packaging and would be removed when installed so not a part need to use the derailleur. Here is the link to the DISRAELI GEARS UK page where I received the info below;
http://www.disraeligears.co.uk/Site/Aut ... lleur.html
As for a price? I can't find any to offer so I know it's against the rules not to have a price but how do you price something not knowing it's true value so I'll throw a price out there and you can call me crazy or you can say, "that's not enough, ask for more!"
$175.00 obo
Free shipping to the UK
Let me try and explain how the wondrous AutoBike Smartshift 2000 actually works.
The large round (solid steel) object protruding towards the viewer from the rear knuckle is a weight that is split into two halves. This weight spins on a spindle that runs through the knuckle and has a small v-belt pulley on the other end of it. This pulley is very near the spokes of the rear wheel. A plastic plate is fitted behind the freewheel, much like a conventional spoke protector. This plate, however, has a v-belt groove around its outer edge, and the v-belt runs from this groove over the small pulley on the derailleur.
As the rear wheel turns, the weight is spun at a ferocious speed. As the weight spins, the two halves move apart (due to the mythical ‘centrifugal force’) and - much like the governor on a Victorian steam engine - they operate the two steel arms running on either side of the rear knuckle. These arms, working against the parallelogram spring, drive the derailleur towards higher gears.
The faster the rear wheel turns, the more the derailleur moves to a higher gear. When the rear wheel stops the derailleur always moves to the low gear position. All this without any direct intervention by the Big-Mac-chompin’-commie-stompin’-bible-quotin’-handgun-totin’ all-American rider. Good ol’ Sarah Palin may not have a whole helluva grasp of Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species, but she could surely get the hang of a SmartShift 2000, yesiree.
The Allen bolt that is mounted on the top of the front knuckle controls the parallelogram spring tension. As you increase the tension you increase the speed required to move the derailleur - so it effectively tends to change up into any particular gear at a higher wheel speed. Think of it like the ‘sports’ setting on the auto-box of your Trans Am - good for when David Hasselhof wants to pull the beach babes - but best ignored when in motorised-sofa-cruising-on-the-Pacific-Coast-Highway mode.
The AutoBike Smartshift 2000 does appear to have some kind of provision for the derailleur to operate, or be operated by, a cable, but I have never seen this in action. It could be a way that you could limit the gear range (like in an automatic car) or it could be a way that the derailleur could operate a gear indicator, perhaps on the handlebars. Continuing the Darwinian theme, I prefer to think of this feature as an evolutionary relic much like the appendix in the human digestive system.
But seriously, the strangest thing about this design is that it is not indexed in any way. When you are travelling at a speed that would naturally cause the derailleur to be between two gears - then the derailleur happily positions itself between the two gears. The one person who I have spoken to who has ridden this system extensively seemed unbothered by this - apparently you soon learn to tune your speed to suit. Somehow I can’t imagine this being easy when descending or climbing steep hills - exactly the time when I, as a not overly thin, not overly fit, person, seem to most need my gears to function accurately. Perhaps they don’t have steep hills in Muskogee (a place where even squares can have a ball).
Unlike the later LandRider Auto Shift in this collection, this example of the SmartShift 2000 is a version with a short pulley cage. Frank Berto shows a drawing of this model labeled ‘Falcon AD-30’ - and this example is certainly manufactured by Falcon and has ‘Falcon’ branded pulley wheels.
Next stop - bikes with cup holders, cruise control, bull bars and gun racks. Parking radar, anybody?
•Brand: AutoBike, manufactured by Falcon
•Country: USA, manufactured in Taiwan
•Date of introduction: 1999
•Date of this example: unknown
•Model no: unknown
•Weight: 566g including hanger plate, but excluding drive belt and drive disc
•Maximum cog: 28 teeth?
•Total capacity: 28 teeth?
•Pulley centre to centre: 56mm
•Index compatibility: friction
•Chain width: 3/32”
•Logic: low normal
•Pivots: two sprung pivots
•Material: largely steel, with an aluminium rear knuckle
http://www.disraeligears.co.uk/Site/Aut ... lleur.html
As for a price? I can't find any to offer so I know it's against the rules not to have a price but how do you price something not knowing it's true value so I'll throw a price out there and you can call me crazy or you can say, "that's not enough, ask for more!"
$175.00 obo
Free shipping to the UK
Let me try and explain how the wondrous AutoBike Smartshift 2000 actually works.
The large round (solid steel) object protruding towards the viewer from the rear knuckle is a weight that is split into two halves. This weight spins on a spindle that runs through the knuckle and has a small v-belt pulley on the other end of it. This pulley is very near the spokes of the rear wheel. A plastic plate is fitted behind the freewheel, much like a conventional spoke protector. This plate, however, has a v-belt groove around its outer edge, and the v-belt runs from this groove over the small pulley on the derailleur.
As the rear wheel turns, the weight is spun at a ferocious speed. As the weight spins, the two halves move apart (due to the mythical ‘centrifugal force’) and - much like the governor on a Victorian steam engine - they operate the two steel arms running on either side of the rear knuckle. These arms, working against the parallelogram spring, drive the derailleur towards higher gears.
The faster the rear wheel turns, the more the derailleur moves to a higher gear. When the rear wheel stops the derailleur always moves to the low gear position. All this without any direct intervention by the Big-Mac-chompin’-commie-stompin’-bible-quotin’-handgun-totin’ all-American rider. Good ol’ Sarah Palin may not have a whole helluva grasp of Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species, but she could surely get the hang of a SmartShift 2000, yesiree.
The Allen bolt that is mounted on the top of the front knuckle controls the parallelogram spring tension. As you increase the tension you increase the speed required to move the derailleur - so it effectively tends to change up into any particular gear at a higher wheel speed. Think of it like the ‘sports’ setting on the auto-box of your Trans Am - good for when David Hasselhof wants to pull the beach babes - but best ignored when in motorised-sofa-cruising-on-the-Pacific-Coast-Highway mode.
The AutoBike Smartshift 2000 does appear to have some kind of provision for the derailleur to operate, or be operated by, a cable, but I have never seen this in action. It could be a way that you could limit the gear range (like in an automatic car) or it could be a way that the derailleur could operate a gear indicator, perhaps on the handlebars. Continuing the Darwinian theme, I prefer to think of this feature as an evolutionary relic much like the appendix in the human digestive system.
But seriously, the strangest thing about this design is that it is not indexed in any way. When you are travelling at a speed that would naturally cause the derailleur to be between two gears - then the derailleur happily positions itself between the two gears. The one person who I have spoken to who has ridden this system extensively seemed unbothered by this - apparently you soon learn to tune your speed to suit. Somehow I can’t imagine this being easy when descending or climbing steep hills - exactly the time when I, as a not overly thin, not overly fit, person, seem to most need my gears to function accurately. Perhaps they don’t have steep hills in Muskogee (a place where even squares can have a ball).
Unlike the later LandRider Auto Shift in this collection, this example of the SmartShift 2000 is a version with a short pulley cage. Frank Berto shows a drawing of this model labeled ‘Falcon AD-30’ - and this example is certainly manufactured by Falcon and has ‘Falcon’ branded pulley wheels.
Next stop - bikes with cup holders, cruise control, bull bars and gun racks. Parking radar, anybody?
•Brand: AutoBike, manufactured by Falcon
•Country: USA, manufactured in Taiwan
•Date of introduction: 1999
•Date of this example: unknown
•Model no: unknown
•Weight: 566g including hanger plate, but excluding drive belt and drive disc
•Maximum cog: 28 teeth?
•Total capacity: 28 teeth?
•Pulley centre to centre: 56mm
•Index compatibility: friction
•Chain width: 3/32”
•Logic: low normal
•Pivots: two sprung pivots
•Material: largely steel, with an aluminium rear knuckle
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AutoBike Smartshift 2000 4.jpg52.8 KB · Views: 1,496
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AutoBike Smartshift 2000 3.jpg53.5 KB · Views: 1,495
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AutoBike Smartshift 2000 4.jpg52.6 KB · Views: 1,496
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AutoBike Smartshift 2000 3.jpg54.4 KB · Views: 1,496