elapid said:
Safety, pure and simple. The height of steps as stipulated by state/provincial/country codes can in no way be misconstrued into a justification of short cranks and the biomechanics of pedalling technique.
Just dropped in to see how the argument was coming along. Reading up the page, everything seems to be pretty normal.
However, as a poster, the whole stair comparison hooks me. First off, the point about the evolution of stairs is rather missed by thinking only in terms of modern building codes. If we take a trip to Mayan ruins, we could find some pretty big rise staircases - but such tall rises in the stairs did not survive in common use. Building codes come in after stairs have already settled on a something like 6-9" range in the rise.
Second, the whole stair comparison may not even be valid. Stairs are designed for a general population, and for general use, not the specific use case /application of mechanical force that is the bicycle. I can see the thought might be useful for thinking out of the box - but the two are mechanically somewhat different in function.
Which brings me to "third". It seems to me that the biomechanical motion of running is a better parallel to the action while bicycling. One doesn't normally run up stairs - the stride is too long. If you run up stairs, you are just as likely to take them two at a time, yes?
And, fourth, and last. Bicycles have also seen a lot of evolution. Thinking too narrowly in terms of comparing to stairs seems to ignore the evolution of bicycle parts and dimensions. There were a whole lot of "test subjects", aka "the marketplace", around in the late 1800's, during the bicycle craze. And, there were also a lot of people experimenting with variants on mechanical themes in that age. We didn't see anything like it again until the computer age - so a gap of over 50 years. During which evolution of mechanical themes still occurred, just not as rapidly.
So, I find the stair argument useful, perhaps, in reminding us to think outside the box, but not useful to convince me that ultra-short cranks are the next biomechanical "thing" for cyclists.