I love my SPDs
View Full Version : I love my SPDs
Hi again,
Just did my first 50k with SPDs (the magic wiggle fairy came
through again - with sweeties). They are brilliant (the
SPDs, not the sweeties)!!
If I'd known how much they would help with comfort, and
performance, I would have taken the plunge months ago.
Thanks to everyone who offered advice. At the moment the
pedals are set on minimum tension - this seems fine, they
are easy to get out of - yet I haven't had one "nuisance"
release yet. Doubtless one of the SPuD gotcha's will get me
eventually (forgetting to unclip the remaining foot before
attempting a dismount perhaps?) but for now I am a convert!
--
Chris
On Fri, 02 Apr 2004 18:10:23 +0100, in
<c4k6q2$hj$1$8302bc10@news.demon.co.uk>, Succorso
<chris@ivy-house.net> wrote:
>Hi again,
>
>Just did my first 50k with SPDs (the magic wiggle fairy
>came through again - with sweeties). They are brilliant
>(the SPDs, not the sweeties)!!
>
>If I'd known how much they would help with comfort, and
>performance, I would have taken the plunge months ago.
>
>Thanks to everyone who offered advice. At the moment the
>pedals are set on minimum tension - this seems fine, they
>are easy to get out of - yet I haven't had one "nuisance"
>release yet. Doubtless one of the SPuD gotcha's will get me
>eventually (forgetting to unclip the remaining foot before
>attempting a dismount perhaps?) but for now I am a convert!
I ordered £180 worth of stuff from Wiggle today ... in the
special instriction box on the webform I asked for some
wine gums.
They'd better oblige :-)
--
usenet01@artybee.net Personal Site: www.artybee.net (same
crap, different layout) Sutton Brass :
www.suttonbrass.org.uk
"Succorso" <chris@ivy-house.net> wrote in message
news:c4k6q2$hj$1$8302bc10@news.demon.co.uk...
> Doubtless one of the SPuD gotcha's will get me eventually
> (forgetting to unclip the remaining foot before attempting
> a dismount perhaps?) but for now I am a convert!
>
Practice falling off!
Go somewhere soft, clip in, try to forget you are clipped
in, try balancing, don't even think about uncliping until
you are definitely falling over.
Once you know how to unclip when you are falling over
you'll be safe.
Richard Bates wrote:
> I ordered £180 worth of stuff from Wiggle today ... in the
> special instriction box on the webform I asked for some
> wine gums.
>
> They'd better oblige :-)
I got some on Thursday with my new Briko glasses and a pair
of shorts. That was a lot less than £180!
On Sat, 03 Apr 2004 08:18:50 +0100, Zog The Undeniable
<hrothgar19@yahoo.com> wrote:
>Richard Bates wrote:
>
>> I ordered £180 worth of stuff from Wiggle today ... in
>> the special instriction box on the webform I asked for
>> some wine gums.
>>
>> They'd better oblige :-)
>
>I got some on Thursday with my new Briko glasses and a pair
>of shorts. That was a lot less than £180!
I didn't get any with my 400 quid Pace forks :-(
--
"We take these risks, not to escape from life, but to
prevent life escaping from us." http://www.bensales.com (http://www.bensales.com/)
Reply to Succorso
> Just did my first 50k with SPDs
Oddly enough, yesterday I did my first 50k in *ages*, in
brand new Shimano SPD sandals. (Feeling foolish, I packed my
regular Rockhoppers & socks, in case the sandals were
seriously uncomfortable; they were fine.)
> At the moment the pedals are set on minimum tension - this
> seems fine, they are easy to get out of - yet I haven't
> had one "nuisance" release yet.
When I started on SPDs, I set the release to minimum,
planning to increase the tension when I was confident. I've
never had a problem (touch wood), but I've never bothered to
change the setting.
One thing I really don't know about SPD pedals & cleats:
what sort of maintenance they need. Common sense tells me I
ought to grease the mechanism some time.
--
Mark, UK. Well, whiles I am a beggar, I will rail, And say
there is no sin but to be rich; And, being rich, my virtue
then shall be, To say there is no vice, but beggary.
"Richard Bates" <usenet01@artybee.net> wrote in message
news:g3lr60daocb5bvba4v7fbubt4mfm0hp7t0@4ax.com...
>
> I ordered £180 worth of stuff from Wiggle today ... in the
> special instriction box on the webform I asked for some
> wine gums.
Don't people find Wiggle a little pricey? I've used
cycleXpress and chain reaction and find them both excellent
- quick, cheap and with free postage! Though I see that
Wiggle do have an excellent range.
--
Mike W
"dirtylitterboxofferingstospammers" <wafflycathcs@aol.comcomcom> wrote in
message news:20040403063204.29433.00000668@mb-m11.aol.com...
>
>
> >Don't people find Wiggle a little pricey? I've used
> >cycleXpress and chain reaction and find them both
> >excellent - quick, cheap and with free postage! Though I
> >see that Wiggle do have an excellent range.
>
> I've used both Wiggle and CycleXpress - depends what I
> want to buy & check
the
> prices on both.
>
> Cheers, helen s
>
>
>
> --This is an invalid email address to avoid spam-- to get
> correct one remove fame & fortune
> h*$el*$$e*nd**$o$ts**i*$*$m*m$o*n*s@$*a$o*l.c**$om$
>
> --Due to financial crisis the light at the end of the
> tunnel is switched
off--
>
>
>
I find Evans cycles and CycleXpress much better value
than Wiggle.
Succorso wrote:
> Doubtless one of the SPuD gotcha's will get me eventually
> (forgetting to unclip the remaining foot before attempting
> a dismount perhaps?) but for now I am a convert!
I get "gothchad" every then and now, but not nearly as often
as I used to get caught by toeclip/strap gothchas or still
get caught by platform pedal gotchas (like feet flying off
over big bumps). Clipless are Just Plain Better over any
sort of distance.
Pete.
--
Peter Clinch University of Dundee Tel 44 1382 660111 ext.
33637 Medical Physics, Ninewells Hospital Fax 44 1382 640177
Dundee DD1 9SY Scotland UK net p.j.clinch@dundee.ac.uk
http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~pjclinch/
On Fri, 02 Apr 2004 22:01:21 +0100, in
<g3lr60daocb5bvba4v7fbubt4mfm0hp7t0@4ax.com>, Richard Bates
<usenet01@artybee.net> wrote:
>I ordered £180 worth of stuff from Wiggle today ... in the
>special instruction box on the webform I asked for some
>wine gums.
>
>They'd better oblige :-)
Got 'em!
--
Isn't it annoying when cyclingforums.com publish messages
that they haven't been granted permission to archive. In my
opinion it is as bad as software piracy.
> In my opinion it is as bad as software piracy.
Which is a good thing.
In news:407146c0$0$63624$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk,
Simonb <sbennett@widerworld.co.uk> typed:
>> In my opinion [cyclingforums claiming our posts as its
>> own for profit with no opt out] it is as bad as software
>> piracy.
>
> Which is a good thing.
No it isn't. Piracy is too strong a word for the illegal
copying of software (lots of people are still murdered each
year in the cause of piracy), but it's immoral not to pay
for things you use, IMHO.
"Ambrose Nankivell" <$FirstnameInitialofSurname$@onetel.net.uk> wrote in
message news:c4rh6n$2li5qv$1@ID-93953.news.uni-berlin.de...
> In news:407146c0$0$63624$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk,
> Simonb <sbennett@widerworld.co.uk> typed:
> >> In my opinion [cyclingforums claiming our posts as its
> >> own for profit with no opt out] it is as bad as
> >> software piracy.
> >
> > Which is a good thing.
>
> No it isn't. Piracy is too strong a word for the illegal
> copying of
software
> (lots of people are still murdered each year in the cause
> of piracy), but it's immoral not to pay for things you
> use, IMHO.
I'm not going to buy a second copy of Win2k (or whatever)
just so as I can run it simultaneously on 2 machines at
home. I've already paid for it once!
On Mon, 5 Apr 2004 12:51:25 +0100, in
<c4rh6n$2li5qv$1@ID-93953.news.uni-berlin.de>, "Ambrose Nankivell"
<$FirstnameInitialofSurname$@onetel.net.uk> wrote:
>In news:407146c0$0$63624$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk, Simonb
><sbennett@widerworld.co.uk> typed:
>>> In my opinion [cyclingforums claiming our posts as its
>>> own for profit with no opt out] it is as bad as software
>>> piracy.
>>
>> Which is a good thing.
Are you saying that software piracy is the good thing, or
that my opinion is the good thing?
>
>No it isn't. Piracy is too strong a word for the illegal
>copying of software (lots of people are still murdered each
>year in the cause of piracy), but it's immoral not to pay
>for things you use, IMHO.
I'd never actually connected "piracy" with "piracy" and had
as such not considered it to be an unsuitable word.
I don't expect to be paid for my posts being published on
cyclingforums. I just want to be given the choice.
Perhaps I'm just a pedantic bugger?
--
Isn't it annoying when cyclingforums.com publish messages
that they haven't been granted permission to archive. In my
opinion it is as bad as software piracy.
On Mon, 5 Apr 2004 12:57:01 +0100, in
<4071498e$0$63622$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk>, "Simonb"
<sbennett@YOUAREALLHEATHENSwiderworld.co.uk> wrote:
>
>"Ambrose Nankivell"
><$FirstnameInitialofSurname$@onetel.net.uk> wrote in
>message news:c4rh6n$2li5qv$1@ID-93953.news.uni-berlin.de...
>> In news:407146c0$0$63624$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk,
>> Simonb <sbennett@widerworld.co.uk> typed:
>> >> In my opinion [cyclingforums claiming our posts as its
>> >> own for profit with no opt out] it is as bad as
>> >> software piracy.
>> >
>> > Which is a good thing.
>>
>> No it isn't. Piracy is too strong a word for the illegal
>> copying of
>software
>> (lots of people are still murdered each year in the cause
>> of piracy), but it's immoral not to pay for things you
>> use, IMHO.
>
>I'm not going to buy a second copy of Win2k (or whatever)
>just so as I can run it simultaneously on 2 machines at
>home. I've already paid for it once!
I wanted a set of front and rear panniers to be used
simultaneously. Should I have just purchased the rear and
stolen the front?
--
Isn't it annoying when cyclingforums.com publish messages
that they haven't been granted permission to archive. In my
opinion it is as bad as software piracy.
Richard Bates wrote:
> I wanted a set of front and rear panniers to be used
> simultaneously. Should I have just purchased the rear and
> stolen the front?
It depends whether the pannier manufacturers had used
extortion to force all rack makers to ship racks with their
panniers pre-installed until there were no other pannier
makers left, at which point they increased the price,
including charging more for old stocks of panniers which
work on lower-spec racks ;-)
--
Guy
===
May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after
posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk (http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk/)
88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at
Washington University
Richard Bates wrote:
> On Mon, 5 Apr 2004 12:57:01 +0100, in
> <4071498e$0$63622$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk>, "Simonb"
> <sbennett@YOUAREALLHEATHENSwiderworld.co.uk> wrote:
>
>>
>>"Ambrose Nankivell"
>><$FirstnameInitialofSurname$@onetel.net.uk> wrote in
>>message news:c4rh6n$2li5qv$1@ID-93953.news.uni-
>>berlin.de...
>>> In news:407146c0$0$63624$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk,
>>> Simonb <sbennett@widerworld.co.uk> typed:
>>> >> In my opinion [cyclingforums claiming our posts as
>>> >> its own for profit with no opt out] it is as bad as
>>> >> software piracy.
>>> >
>>> > Which is a good thing.
>>>
>>> No it isn't. Piracy is too strong a word for the illegal
>>> copying of
>>software
>>> (lots of people are still murdered each year in the
>>> cause of piracy), but it's immoral not to pay for things
>>> you use, IMHO.
>>
>>I'm not going to buy a second copy of Win2k (or whatever)
>>just so as I can run it simultaneously on 2 machines at
>>home. I've already paid for it once!
>
> I wanted a set of front and rear panniers to be used
> simultaneously. Should I have just purchased the rear and
> stolen the front?
>
It's allright. I have a copy of Windows that I was forced to
buy but never use. Ambrose can (morally if not legally) use
the extra installation on my behalf.
AC (Who uses free software, rather than pirated)
On 5/4/04 1:19 pm, in article c4rit8$2m3v0b$1@ID-151936.news.uni-berlin.de,
"Just zis Guy, you know?" <outlook.bugs@microsoft.com> wrote:
> Richard Bates wrote:
>
>> I wanted a set of front and rear panniers to be used
>> simultaneously. Should I have just purchased the rear and
>> stolen the front?
>
> It depends whether the pannier manufacturers had used
> extortion to force all rack makers to ship racks with
> their panniers pre-installed until there were no other
> pannier makers left, at which point they increased the
> price, including charging more for old stocks of panniers
> which work on lower-spec racks ;-)
No no no..
You buy a license to use your panniers on one rack. If you
want to use them on another rack then you have to buy
another license for that rack.
And if you upgrade your panniers then you have to buy a new
license. You can't hang your panniers on the sides of a
supermarket trolley while shopping unless it also has a
pannier license.
..d
> No no no..
>
> You buy a license to use your panniers on one rack. If you
> want to use
them
> on another rack then you have to buy another license for
> that rack.
>
> And if you upgrade your panniers then you have to buy a
> new license. You can't hang your panniers on the sides of
> a supermarket trolley while shopping unless it also has a
> pannier license.
And, if I wanted to legally sell or donate my bike to
someone else, I am obliged to include the panniers (as well
as all manuals and accompanying printed materials).
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