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  2. Track cycling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Track_cycling

    The most noticeable changes in over a century of track cycling have concerned the bikes themselves, engineered to be lighter and more aerodynamic to enable ever-faster times. Track cycling has been featured in every modern Olympic Games except the 1912 Games. Women's track cycling events were first included in the modern Olympics in 1988. [4]

  3. Track bicycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Track_bicycle

    The track bicycle made by Pinarello that Bradley Wiggins rode to break the hour record in June 2015. A track bicycle or track bike is a bicycle optimized for racing at a velodrome or outdoor track. Unlike road bicycles, the track bike is a fixed-gear bicycle; thus, it has only a single gear ratio and has neither a freewheel nor brakes.

  4. List of bicycle parts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bicycle_parts

    List of bicycle parts by alphabetic order: Axle : as in the generic definition, a rod that serves to attach a wheel to a bicycle and provides support for bearings on which the wheel rotates. Also sometimes used to describe suspension components, for example a swing arm pivot axle

  5. Glossary of cycling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_cycling

    Track An oval cycling track for races, banked at up to 50 degrees. Cycling tracks are usually indoors. Bicycling or cycle tracks are also called velodromes. [72] An Olympic track is generally 250 m long. [122] Train A method in stage races to get a sprinter to the front of a bunch sprint and launched.

  6. List of bicycle types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bicycle_types

    Track bicycles are ultra-simple, lightweight fixed-gear bikes with no brakes, designed for track cycling on purpose-built cycle tracks, often in velodromes. Path Racers are an antique type of track bicycle. Cyclo-cross bicycles are lightweight enough to be carried over obstacles, and robust enough to be cycled through mud.

  7. Velodrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velodrome

    The zone between black and red lines is sprinter's lane, which is the optimum route around the track. A rider leading in the sprinter's lane may not be passed on the inside; other riders must pass on the longer outside route. Minimum 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) (or half the track width) above the inside of the track is the blue stayer's line.

  8. List of cycling tracks and velodromes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cycling_tracks_and...

    Built in 1971. Renovated in 2007. Regular stop for the UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics. Hosted 2014 UCI Track Cycling World Championships: 998 m Colombia: Velódromo Alfonso Salamanca Duitama: 250 m: concrete Outdoor Colombia: Velódromo Martín Emilio Cochise Rodriguez Medellín: 250 m: 45°/8.5° concrete Outdoor Colombia: Velódromo ...

  9. Cycle track - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycle_track

    A cycle track or cycleway (British) or bikeway [1] (mainly North American), sometimes historically [2] referred to as a sidepath, is a separate route for cycles and not motor vehicles. In some cases cycle tracks are also used by other users such as pedestrians and horse riders (see shared-use route ).