Subject: RE: Looking to buy a used (aka cheap) race wheelchairHere's another thought. Depending on your wife's fitness level, endurance, tolerance for discomfort, and the nature of her impairment, she may want to consider handcycling instead. Body position in a racing chair is a tight Z, with hips and knees fully flexed. In a handcycle (unless it's a kneeler), the rider is semi-recumbent with legs fully extended. Handcycles have gears, so a novice will be able to train to do a marathon distance much faster than a wheelchair racer. There is currently a debate going on in the adaptive sports community about handcycles in road races, and the handcycle faction is winning: more and more marathons now have handcycle divisions separate from the pushrim (racing) wheelchair division. |