First look: Tacx Bushido electronic trainer
Winter is coming, which means many of us will spend hours mindlessly spinning away on a trainer. Today's fancy computer-controlled trainers increase the entertainment factor but their associated wires can be a hassle, especially for those who don't have the room to leave the trainer in place all season.
Tacx's stout-looking Bushido trainer, however, uses no wires whatsoever – all communication is wireless via the ubiquitous ANT+ protocol and not even the resistance unit has to be plugged into the wall so setup is quick and clean.
According to Tacx, the resistance unit draws its braking energy directly from the rider's pedalling power, which subsequently spins an on-board dynamo. Apparently up to a 15 percent grade can be faithfully reproduced.
Built-in feedback sensors not only measure speed and wattage but also cadence (that is, unless you have an absolutely perfect pedal stroke – which no one does) and left/right power balance.
The handlebar-mounted control unit is battery-powered and displays the usual array of information: current, maximum and average speed, cadence, power, and heart rate, plus ride distances, position relative to an optional phantom competitor, and energy consumption. Buttons are claimed to be fully waterproof, to stop corrosion from perspiration.

The display unit controls all of the basic settings and has waterproof buttons
The real fun begins when you use the optional PC interface, though – which, again, uses a wireless ANT+ dongle for communication – and the more advanced software package.
As is typical for the genre, the Bushido training software can be used in several modes: full manual, a video-game-like virtual reality environment or a real-life video mode to be used in conjunction with a well-stocked library of DVDs.

Use of the optional PC upgrade enables a far greater collection of features

Riders can opt to view themselves in a video-game-like environment...

… or in a more life-like scenario
The system can also interface directly with Google Earth online. Simply pull up the area in question, establish your start, finish and intermediate points on the screen and the system does the rest.
Once the information is loaded and you start the routine, you can follow your icon directly on the Google Earth map or simulate the point-of-view environment in cartoon form.

A trick interface with Google Earth allows users to create whatever course they wish
Naturally, Bushido isn't cheap: suggested retail price is €825 (approx £760/US$1,240 at current exchange rate) and the additional PC hardware and software adds another €75 (£70/$113) but well-heeled cyclists might still find it worth the cost.
Also available for this winter are other electronically controlled and standard trainers and rollers, and the company's comprehensive array of bottles and cages, but Tacx's lesser-known tool collection is worth a look as well.

Also new from Tacx is this clever chain tool with a flip-top lid that stores spare links
New for 2010 is a slick chain tool with a unique flip-top box-type layout that both stores spare links and holds the loose ends of a chain together for easier operation.
On the road, the Tool Tube Plus mimics the homemade setups many pros use: the screw-top canister fits in a bottle cage and includes a multi-tool, tyre levers and CO2 inflator with room to spare for a tube and a rag.
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User Comments
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Showing 1 - 2 of 2 comments
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Taurine
Posted Tue 27 Oct, 9:43 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
I bought one of these as soon as it came out, mainly for use with the "Real Life Videos".
The kit seems pretty solid and well made however I have a number of reservations that mean I would probably not buy Tacx products again.
1. The software doesn't work with 64-bit Windows (pretty much the most common version of Windows available at the moment) , it doesn't say this anywhere on the Tacx store, on the boxes and packaging (until you have opened everything) and Tacx have decided to charge users for an upcoming upgrade. There appears to be a long history of confused and overpriced software versions and upgrades from Tacx - with pretty terrible communication. Lots of users are now left with unusable Bushido units while they wait for an upgrade to be released - and they are expected to pay for it over the cost of the original purchase !
2. The unit is not able to simulate the inclines that it advertises. Tacx did advertise 20%, then they recently started reporting 15%, but actually they think it is only able to handle about 13% and even then it will give up if you are not able to keep up a fairly fast pace as the brake can not produce resistance at low cadence, becomes choppy and then eventually gives up. What this means is that the unit is unable to simulate the climbs in some of their own videos, looks like they didn't bother testing it.
They acknowledge that this is a bug and are looking into it - unfortunately they have history with this, a previous version of the top end Fortius unit had a hardware fault and the fix was an upgrade that Tacx charged owners for.
In summary I think these trainers are a great idea and I do believe that Tacx has one of the better products compared to existing competitors. However this is a market ripe for a well run company to step in and deliver a much better customer experience both in terms of technical sophistication, client relationships and communication. When that happens I'm sad to say that a company like Tacx will be left well behind.
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ergovideo
Posted Sat 28 Nov, 11:51 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
1 - The Tacx training software for the Bushido now works fine with 64bit PCs & this is a free update to version 1 users. The new version 2 costs a bit more then the original software at €80 but also includes all the VR terrains made for the Fortius trainer & a Google earth route editor.
2 - There is a new firmware update going live this week which cures the under voltage issue thats caused when you go so slow on steep grades that there is not enough power over for the communication between the break & the display....now there is power & we have also improved the feel of climbing with a little more flywheel inertia.
3 - the break force at this point is about 3x more powerful then the extremely popular i-magic. It will not over heat on long mountain passes like some VR trainers & you can if you want grovel up a 15% hill at 30rpm .....if this will do you any good though is debatable ;-).
4 - We will have the last 123km of the 2010 Etape du Tour available as a RLV in the next weeks, This will be used by the Schlecks this winter as they prepare on their 2 Bushido trainers.
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