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Molly's Bike Arm
Molly has a 21 speed mountain bike. It is necessary for a mountain bike rider to be able to shift her weight in front of and behind the seat while standing on her pedals. With weight off the seat one can have much better control on rough surfaces and going up and down steep slippery inclines. Molly's bike has a few modifications to allow her full control. First we found what was called a brush guard handle bar. We then cut the "guard" off the left side, Molly's hand side, allowing a thumb gear shifter and a grip shifter to slide on. The thumb shifter shifts the front derailleur and the grip shifter controls the rear derailleur. Braking is also controlled on her left side. Shriner's had provided, but we have since seen these in bike shops, a hand brake lever that controls the front and rear brake at the same time. The front/rear bias is adjustable on the brake cables. The right side of the bike has the brush guard rotated toward the rider. It curves back toward the front in order to provide additional support to the prosthesis and hopefully will not cause injury in a crash. This bike also has toe clips that are missing the straps. These clips help the foot stay in the pedal while still allowing quick escape from the clip.
Molly on bike. If she was heading out
she would be wearing her helmet and
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Copyright © 2004
International Child Amputee Network
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