There is no arrogance to assert that I have thought more about rowing ergometer handle design than Concept 2. They have thought about it hardly at all. Nor have any of the other manufacturers of rowing ergometers. Even Technogym, the Italian company known for its beautiful designs, obviously gave it no thought. There is the rigid, single-piece handle on their machine. It has become an expected element. It is not as if many have tried to improve on this standard handle design and failed. No one even considers the possibility that it could be improved. The internalized and unexamined presupposition is that that is the way Concept 2 has always done it, therefore it must be the best way to do it. That presupposition does not stand up to scrutiny.Slidewinder wrote: ↑November 28th, 2022, 3:13 pmI have thought a lot about rowing ergometer handle design, probably more than anyone here, probably more than Concept 2.
The simple cable loop/bicycle handgrip configuration I describe in my Nov. 24 post in this thread... ...should be configured so that when you hold your arms straight in front of you with your hands in a vertical position you will appear in your pose as if you are holding and aiming two pistols. This is the hand to wrist position that we want the rowing handle to maintain throughout the stroke.
Remember this design guideline: Imagine that at the catch you are holding two pistols, aiming them at the flywheel sprocket. You are holding the pistols in the cool way they did in the TV show 'Miami Vice' - you have them both tilted over towards the horizontal. You keep the pistols aimed at the flywheel sprocket as you push off, and you keep them aimed there as you move your hands and arms from a forward extended position to a retracted close-to-the torso-position, where your hands will naturally be further apart than at the beginning of the stroke. You aim the pistols at the flywheel sprocket for the duration of the stroke - drive and recovery. Imagine how natural and comfortable and non-stressed that would feel. That is what a well-designed rowing ergometer handle should do - enable the user's hands to move through space as if the user is pointing two guns, Miami Vice style, at the flywheel sprocket. It is extraordinarily interesting that this turns out to be very similar to a rower's hand movement in the latter half of an actual sculling stroke.
As I wrote, this design goal can be satisfactorily achieved with a simple diy cable/handgrip assembly. But for some, this feels a bit loosey-goosey. For those with shop skills the cable could be replaced with pivotable rigid links, the pivots arranged such that the handgrips can still follow a sculling stroke geometry, but with the improvement of an oars-in-the-oarlocks feeling. Unlike flexible cable connections, links with properly oriented pivot points define the planes of movement of the handgrips, and this is experienced as a greater sense of spatial stability