Meet the Elliptigo: Part Bike, Part Elliptical Machine



The simplest way to stay fit is to just go for a run right? It doesn't cost anything, you can do it almost anywhere and it's a good workout. The U.S. Track and Field Organization estimates there are 50 million adult runners in the United States alone.  

But for the aging runner who's laced up the sneakers all their lives, now the hip pain or knee pain is telling them running is no longer an option.

Many have tried biking, but to get a similar workout to a run, you have to bike for two to three times as long. And being hunched over or looking down for a few hours can be a pain ... and that doesn't even take into consideration the pain in the posterior that bikes can evoke.

The solution for many has been trips to the gym for the elliptical machine: a gliding no-impact exercise machine that prolongs running, but it's indoors and stationary, AKA boring.

Enter the Elliptigo. It's a cross between a road bike and an elliptical machine at the gym. Zero impact, you get a runner's workout in 30 to 45 minutes while riding the Elliptigo outside on the road.

 

I tried it in Northern California after my friend Missy Park introduced me to the new device.

A former basketball player, Park used to run every day but that stopped a few years ago. Last Christmas when she and her family were writing their annual letters to Santa, Park asked for new knees.

"Instead, Santa bought me the Elliptigo," she said.

Her partner Dana Tillson thought the device would be perfect for the time-crunched Park.

As I first get on the Elliptigo, I immediately notice how tall I feel -- you ride much higher than on a standard bike. Balancing the nearly six-foot-long device was surprisingly easy and with a few strides I'm on my way.

I steer warily at first and while the Elliptigo doesn't have the turning radius of a standard bike, it's plenty maneuverable. I shift gears; it works just like a bike and I'm ready to go.

Riding with Park, who's a pro now that she's had the device a few months, proves a little harder. I'm huffing and puffing right out of the gates and this old friend is quickly trash-talking me.

But the workout is both effortless on the joints while being a substantial fitness challenge.

"For me, there's something about being up on my feet," Park said. "It feels more active ... and then the other thing about riding a bike -- you're in for about two-and-a-half hours whereas this, you can get a good workout in 45 minutes to an hour."

One thing we both notice as we ride, everyone is staring at us.

"You have to have significant energy just to talk to everyone who wants to know about the Elliptigo," Park said.

The device has plenty of fans, from ultra-marathoner Dean Karnazes to teams like the Boston Celtics, who use the device as a cross-trainer. There was even a "World Championship" Elliptigo event last year: 30-plus competitors tackled the steep 3,990-foot, 11.68-mile Palomar Mountain ascent in California.

So far the device is only for road-biking, not mountain biking or off-roading. And the other significant issue is the price: it starts at $1,800.

But Bryce Whiting, an Elliptigo spokesman, said "that's about what you'd pay for a quality road bike." And as with all new products one can only hope the price will come down as more are manufactured.

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62 comments

  • Skinny Guinea  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  2 months ago
    I want one to park by my Bow-Flex. You know..over there.. by the Ab-Master.
    • worldonfire 2 months ago
      You mean behind the Soloflex?
    • Skinny Guinea 2 months ago
      Yes, but you may need to move the Vita-Master.
  • Sad  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  2 months ago
    Make it 200 bucks and I'm in.
    • From The Twisted Mind OF ... 2 months ago
      Sure hope you don't mind losing your self-respect, riding that thing.
    • P 2 months ago
      If the $200 bucks is coming to me, fine, I'll try it, but I'm not paying for one.
    • andy 2 months ago
      you will get that bike from made in China next two weeks for $200.
  • damifino  •  2 months ago
    $1800??....another toy for the wealthy,99% of the bikes are under $200 and bought at places like walmart....bring it down to that price range and you got something....so much for this being used by people who actually need it,
    • joseph 2 months ago
      Any bike under 200 bucks is a hunk of junk. I am not rich but I am totally in to bikes. I would say that a real good bike starts at about 1000 for a hardtail and 1500 for a fully.
    • A Yahoo! User 2 months ago
      Walmart bikes are toys. If you go to a bike shop those are exercise machines and vehicles. You can certainly get a road bike (more comparable to this machine) for under 500 dollars..
    • Me Me 2 months ago
      Ridden WallyWorld bikes and if you're only riding the sidewalks they're okay. Ended up buying other bikes and my fav is my Specialized RH 29er HT. This suits my riding perfectly and have ridden it on some rocky single tracks, I weigh 240lbs. and the only problem I had was a ghost shift issue after the first ride on the trails. A $200.00 WallyWorld bike would not take this kind of beating.
  • PeteWho  •  2 months ago
    Chinese knock offs will show up a month from now for $50. Just like they did when Razor came out with its scooter years ago.
  • DAVID  •  Tucker, Georgia  •  2 months ago
    I agree with several of you about the cost of the machine and alternate means of exercising, but i have to admit, I'd like to try one. I used to run five days a week, but after knee surgery, I had to stop and find other ways of getting my cardio in. Using the machines at the gym is good, but gets boring like the article says. I think I'll start saving a few pennies; maybe the price'll drop...
  • smgglr  •  2 months ago
    Footbikes, high performance sport scooters cost $300 and have no maintenance costs

    or you can look into Stepbikes...very similiar...available in Germany, they may not sell to the US due to our crap healthcare system which leaves the legal system no choice but to sue for huge sums because you can lose everything if you get hurt...

    Tretoller.dm for loads of cool stuff we can't get.
  • Clint  •  2 months ago
    The Street Strider is a better machine. It involves your upper body into the workout. But, it too is expensive.
  • Fancy Frances  •  Palm Springs, California  •  2 months ago
    Try bmx.
    • P 2 months ago
      Better workout, more fun, less cost with the same risk of an extremely painful crash. :)
  • ShutdnD  •  Barberton, Ohio  •  2 months ago
    Billy Mayes here,........
  • garron  •  2 months ago
    The Honda Kick&Go preceded all these...
    almost 40 years ago.
    As I remember,
    they were MUCH cheaper,even allowing for inflation...
    like,under $100.
    • JEK108 2 months ago
      Garron, you are correct, right on. I did a search on Googlefor a Honda Kick&Go just to see what looked like. I do remember those now. They had one on EBay for $55! Another for $450. Obvious just collector items now.
  • ursula  •  2 months ago
    Wow that is great now just need a price the average Joe can afford!
  • Makojuice  •  2 months ago
    too expensive great idea though
  • remember alamo  •  2 months ago
    I'll wait for the yard sales.
  • Dean  •  2 months ago
    It's hot cause it's new, wait till they mass production it and you'll find it at Walmart in a year or two.
  • Conservative Liberal, Lib ...  •  Los Angeles, California  •  2 months ago
    Try power walking. It's free and just as low impact on the knees.
  • Lacy Bookeater  •  2 months ago
    Rather than spending $1800, spend about $600-800 or less if buying used... on an adult Tricycle.

    People like to scoff at the old lady or old man on the trike with the flag on the back. You try riding one of those things up even a 5 degree incline. You will suddenly discover hills in places that look absolutely flat.

    A trike is a "pig". It is rear heavy.... even having 3 or 6 gears doesn't help much... If you want to get it up a driveway or the slightest incline, you end up riding it like an eliptical..... Most have rear baskets... put additional weight in that, and it gets even harder. You work everything from shoulders down.

    If you hit an actual hill, you'll end up getting off and pulling it up the hill, which exercises a whole different set of muscles.

    Plus, you can use it on short errands rather than your car and you can carry more than if you were on a bike.
  • AquaBuddah  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  2 months ago
    I want one.
  • Daniel  •  Burbank, California  •  2 months ago
    It will make fat people look like there running really fast
  • Bree M  •  Santa Barbara, California  •  2 months ago
    I though about this a long time ago.
  • Dr Woo Hoo  •  2 months ago
    Most people do not live near a place worthy of mountain biking, especially near enough to justify roughly daily workouts. Including me.