Skip to main content

Freewheel is the world’s first fitness tracker for wheelchairs

Freewheel
The Freewheel is a fitness tracker for people who use wheelchairs. The device, brought to life by Accenture’s Chaotic Moon, can be attached to a wheelchair, collect various movement data, and send that information to a smartphone or smartwatch. The possible applications, however, extend well beyond wheelchairs.

The idea for the world’s first wheelchair fitness tracker came from the technology studio’s content strategist, Tyler Hively, who realized the opportunity after talking with his sister, an occupational therapist, about fitness and wheelchair users. “We realized that nothing really existed for fitness tracking, and thought, ‘Hey, this is important. Why not create something?’”

Recommended Videos

Hively brought the idea to Chaotic Moon’s BASE innovation team, which brought together their hardware and software ingenuity to build the Freewheel, a device that houses a gyroscope, accelerometer, barometer, and Hall effect sensors. As a result, the Freewheel can measure speed, acceleration, distance, altitude, incline, and decline. This data is sent to a smartphone or smartwatch via Bluetooth LE and can be combined with other information such as heart rate from smartwatches.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The long game for the Freewheel looks beyond fitness and wheelchairs. Chaotic Moon hopes to crowdsource and aggregate data from the device to eventually map terrain to inform hikers, bikers, and anyone else looking to traverse a city or mountain, for instance.

Chaotic Moon CEO Ben Lamm says the company has “gotten our patents straight” and will be putting the finishing touches on the Freehwheel in the next few months, though there’s no set release date.

Jason Hahn
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jason Hahn is a part-time freelance writer based in New Jersey. He earned his master's degree in journalism at Northwestern…
The hidden psychological drawback of fitness trackers
Anxiety

Smartwatches are great, not just for providing notifications without making us have to pull out our smartphones to check them, but also for our health. The Apple Watch, for example, will prompt you to get up and walk around at regular intervals, as well as alerting wearers if they have an irregular heart rhythm they should get checked out by a doctor.

But not everything about fitness-tracking smartwatches is so good for our health, claims a new report from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. It suggests that smartwatches, while providing no shortage of useful data, also increase anxiety levels. In a study of 27 heart patients who use Fitbit trackers to measure their sleep, heart rates and physical activity, the researchers found that the more people learned about their biometric data, the more anxious they became about it.

Read more
One of the world’s premier supercars hit with recall over fire risk
2018 McLaren Senna

The McLaren Senna could be quite literally too hot to handle for some owners if they don’t respond to a recent recall.

One of the world’s top supercars, the Senna has been called in by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) over a fault that could increase the risk of a fire.

Read more
Did the world’s biggest tech show propel U.S. coronavirus infections?
CES 2019 Crowd Hero Shot

One of the world’s biggest tech events -- CES, held in Las Vegas every January -- may have helped propel COVID-19 infections throughout the country and beyond, according to a story by APM Reports.

The article highlights the case of Michael Webber, a professor at the University of Texas in Austin who also works for a global energy firm based in France. Weber fell ill with severe flu-like symptoms shortly after attending this year’s show, which took place between January 4 and 7. This week, the results of a test revealed Webber has antibodies for the novel coronavirus COVID-19, indicating that he had the disease before making a full recovery.

Read more