Wij zorgen dat je velomobiel blijft rijden
Go to wishlist Wishlist

Shopping cart

Your cart is currently empty

Product image slideshow Items

  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile
  • Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile

Intercity bike Tuna Velomobile

€9.800,00
Incl. tax

The Tuna is the latest Intercitybike Velomobile, with closed wheel boxes in fronten but no compromise in manuvrability and serviceablilty

The rating of this product is 5 out of 5

(2)

The Tuna is Intercity bike's latest velomobile. It is based on the DF-XL and the most striking difference is the closed wheel arches. As a result, the bike has an even better streamline and is less sensitive to crosswinds and the body remains clean when there is mud on the road.

Closed wheel arches normally make maintenance more complcated, but this has been solved with the Tuna because the wheel caps can be removed with a click, so that the wheels and struts are simply accessible in the event of a tire breakdown on the road and maintenance of brake cables. An additional hatch at the bottom between the front wheels makes the wheel guide rods and steering rods very easily accessible. These features make the bike unique in "velomobile country"

To make the bike just as manoeuvrable as the regular DF(XL), slightly smaller front wheels have been used, size 349, also used in the world-wide popular and beloved Brompton folding bikes. This also guarantees that the best tires and rims are and remain available in this size. And do not worry about the presumed higher rolling resistance of the 349 size, look a the tests by Wim Schermer

Convince yourself and take a test ride in one of our 2 available demo bikes!

The rating of this product is 5 out of 5

Wouter |

I had wanted to do a follow up test ride as in the first test ride (above) I failed to push the tuna above 50km/h which I think is important for driving on the main road.
The weather forecast for today was a gloomy day, no sun, about 3bft south, a bit of drizzle and around 11C. So I had not planned anything this day. But to my surptise when I woke up it was sunny with completely blue clear sky. I checked the weather radar and it looked like it was going to stay this way till somewhere around 1PM. The clouds were drifting very slowly towards the north, and probably would arrive in Dronten around 3pm or so. I decided to take the long anticipated second test ride today. Since I had not prepared for this, going there on the DF was out of the question, so I jumped on the train to Dronten.
Luckily they had some time and nobody booked a test ride today. It showed they had no test bike anymore, since they had sold the light blue test bike, and the red and white was now Pieter's. But Ymte gave me his own pink test bike. He adjusted the seat and cranks to my length. I washed the bottom of the Tuna to avoid extra drag from dirt. I fitted the garmin and then it was time for a ride.
I took the Colijnweg to the north, using the bike path. There are a few "sharp" turns and narrow bridge passages but still got up to 51km/h according to the bike computer. I double checked the speed with the garmin. Wind in the back. This looked promising, this would probably the speed I would drive with the DF but the Tuna can not use tail wind because of the closed wheel wells. At Ketelhaven I turned east onto the bike path and drove about 5km east. I could feel a bit of side wind but rode 52 without problem. I turned around, the weather was sunny, maybe 3bft wind and around 11C I assume. With the sun it always feels warmer. Back to Ketelhaven, same speed, nice. Back onto the Colijnweg I now took the main road, A small descend pushed ny speed to 57 but I could not keep that because the front gear was only 53 teeth. I don't know how Ymte can ride with such small gears ;-) I could keep 53 and that was now into the wind and at a bit overspeed rpm. I think in the DF the speed would be around 48 here. The Tuna was a bit drifting from left to right, I had to correct quite often. Maybe there was a bit more wind there, or maybe my high RPM was causing some oscillation, or maybe the steering behaves slightly different from the DF and I have to get used to it.
My previous concerns about the top speed have been resolved with this test ride! I would like to thank ICB again for facilitating this unannounced test ride.

The rating of this product is 5 out of 5

wouter |

The light blue tuna is already waiting for me when I arrive at ICB with my DFXL. The tires are already pumped, the chair is at the right height and even the pedals are at the right distance according a quick test with heels on pedals. Also the pedals are equipped with SPD, nice as that allowed to use my DFXL shoes rather than borrow some. Also the tour/race hood is there.


I like the closed wheel wells better than visible wheels. The vent hole without lips is also nice. I prefer the slightly sleeker tail of the DF over the wider tail of the Tuna. Also there is a bit of a bump visible in the Tuna body, as if they glued on some pants on an existing DF and then made the mould. I would like this a bit smoother.


The tires are CCU at the front, and GP5000 on the rear. I understand all is at 6 bars but I forgot to make a note of that. My dendrocopos faltgarage fits also over the tuna, but the lift hole location is now wrong (it was already tight fit). The mounting bolts for the bottom cover (to access the steering rods) are sticking out slightly. Peter explains that this is needed because these bolts need loctite and then you need stronger bolts to avoid stripping them when loosening them. The bolts are not sticking out far, maybe 2mm, and the risk of hitting anything at this place seems small. These bottom plates are nicely in line with the rest of the bottom. The right luggage compartment (above the swing arm) looks identical to the DF. The 3 switches on the console changed, the top now is an overall on/off, the middle the head light and the bottom the interior light. The shift lever now has an indicator, but feels and works identical to the one in the DF. I can't read the indicator when under the hood.


As there is some unclarity about Tuna's size, we measure the width at both sides of the wheel covers. At the front side, the width is 71.5cm, at the rear side it's 70.0cm. Peter says the maximum width is 74.5cm, and that the length and height are exactly as the DFXL. Especially this 74.5 has my interest, as I think it's close enough to 75 to consider it legal to use the main road instead of the bike path in the Netherlands.


We have some discussion about the new front light location. I don't like stray air coming in and also it seems not optimal for aerodynamics. Peter already tried a glass cover but it quickly fogs up and then the headlight does not work anymore. So if you want to close it here you will also need a back cover to avoid fogging, and then you might have some overheating issue. Maybe the original location is still the best but I don't know if that's still an option.


The seat now hangs from belts (but you can still get the old system as well). The advantage of the belts is that it's much easier to adjust the chair position. But it's some extra work as now after loading the cargo into the bike you have to re-attach the belts to the chair. Some say it may swing a bit during riding, which would cause less efficient driving. Maybe but I could not detect any chair movement while driving.


Ok, let's go for the test ride.


The route is almost a rectangle: straight NW along the N307, N to the ketelmeerdijk, E along the ketelmeerdijk, and further E along the Vossemeerdijk. The Vossemeerdijk turns SE, till I reach the N307 again, from where I ride W along the N307 back to Dronten. About 35km.


It's heavily clouded, and I wait a bit till a heavy shower had moved over. Temp around 9C, wind straight from the west, about 5m/s (3-4 bft), stronger with showers. Close to freezing point when in a shower. Peter plugs the air vent close for me, as I don't want a cold blast of vent air right from the front with this weather. The ventilation will need some modification anyway.


Entering the velomobile is just as easy as with the DFXL. Apparently the manhole is a bit bigger now but I never had issues with the manhole size anyway. The hood feels slightly lighter, maybe it's a bit shorter or so, or maybe it's just the weight of the missing windscreen wiper. The hood has all windows with double glass, nice.


The seat sits well, just like my DFXL. I'm always sitting a bit with my left shoulder against the carbon, it seems the DF seat is a bit to the left, or maybe I'm not straight, and the Tuna has exactly the same. This Tuna has some velcro on the left, to mount shoulder rests, and this irritated my left shoulder. Don't get this velcro if you don't want shoulder rests.


The Tuna starts up light (my DFXL that has much heavier lowest gear). I like that but usually that is at the expense of the top gear which I consider more important. The overview is good, so the hood windows are in the right place. I hear a light humming sound, as if a small electric motor is spooling up. In the first sharp corner I hear a pretty loud scraping of the tire in the wheel arches, much louder than in the DF. Apparently that's normal.


I miss the wiper and it rains a bit so I have to ride a bit slower the first 10 minutes or so along the N307. Speed around 45, I don't push it here. Also this is straight into this cold wind. In my DF I rode similar speeds today into the wind.

Then the north-bound part of the tour, should be side wind, but I don't notice much. Speed stays around 45 till I reach the ketelmeerdijk. This is where I should get wind from the rear and I expect the Tuna to take off now! I take a short break to enjoy the view. The sun is coming through the clouds. An airplane is doing stunts over the ketelmeer.


A short run down the ramp helps building the speed and I push the speed. But I'm puzzled that it stays at 50km/h. In my DFXL this morning I rode just over 50 with sidewind without pushing hard, this should be better? I'm not sure, I push for some 3 minutes but it does not want to go faster. I'm a bit high on RPM, and my legs really hate high RPM. Is that the problem? Or are the CCU's not yet ridden in (they have about 1000km)? I back off a bit, and it settles around 48km/h where it stays without much trouble. Before the vossemeerdijk there are a few crossings, I have to drop the speed. A van stays close behind me when I indicate I need to turn to the left, so the blinkers are working well. Back on the vossemeerdijk I don't push, to see if it will pick up the previous speed again. No it doesn't, it stays around 43. The gentle turn to SE does nothing speedwise either. I check the front wheels, they are moving freely so there is no dragging break or something. Maybe I should also have checked the rear wheel?

Then to get back on the N307 I have to make a 180 degrees turn to get on a short piece of narrow dirt trail. I can't make the turn ( 7.5m radius measured in google maps) in one go, so I have to reverse, this is the moment to test the left hand-on-ground method. That works easily, also because it's pretty flat here, my fingers are in fact less dirty than with wheel-chairing, and after reversing 2 meters I can make the rest of the turn. The remainder of the N307 back to Dronten is again straight into the wind, around 42km/h.


Back at ICB, the bike looks clean, apart from a few mud drops on the left side. Only the bottom side is ugly. This is a huge improvement over my DF where a big part around the wheel houses are covered with mud (it started clean today).


Concluding, the Tuna looks nice, has inherited a lot of nice things from the DF, and rides roughly the same speed (versus power) as the DF. It has a number of interesting improvements. It is wide enough to legally use the main road instead of the bike path. It stays much cleaner. The wheel service hatch makes tire and wheel well maintenance much easier than closed-wheel well velomobiles. It lacked a bit of top speed, I suspect shis is because the gearing does not fit my cadence. I'd like to thank ICB for preparing the Tuna for me and facilitating this test ride.


5 stars based on 2 reviews
Add your review
Please accept cookies to help us improve this website Is this OK? Yes No More on cookies »