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Thread: Carrying a lock

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
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    Central NJ, a quick ride from the shore
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    195

    Carrying a lock

    I'm wondering how you guys carry a lock with you when you ride into areas where a lock is necessary? In the city, folks wear these enormous chains around their bodies like a sash and use them to lock the bikes to trees, street signs, etc.

    But here in the burbs, such a gigantic chain isn't necessary. So I have just a regular chain w/ lock. When I wrap it under the seat, it annoys my thighs. If I try to wrap it on the cross bar, it slides around.

    I feel like maybe I have the wrong kind of lock or maybe I'm just experiencing a total brain failure regarding how to carry this dern thing comfortably.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
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    Seattle
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    Quote Originally Posted by LadyinWhite View Post
    I'm wondering how you guys carry a lock with you when you ride into areas where a lock is necessary? In the city, folks wear these enormous chains around their bodies like a sash and use them to lock the bikes to trees, street signs, etc.

    But here in the burbs, such a gigantic chain isn't necessary. So I have just a regular chain w/ lock. When I wrap it under the seat, it annoys my thighs. If I try to wrap it on the cross bar, it slides around.

    I feel like maybe I have the wrong kind of lock or maybe I'm just experiencing a total brain failure regarding how to carry this dern thing comfortably.
    I always carry a small "latte lock" in the pack behind my seat. I have a bike that has no place for a rear rack so i am very limited as to what i can carry.
    I have already seen how easy it is to cut these cable locks, so i would never leave my bike anywhere for more than a few minutes using it.
    If I am staying somewhere longer (like for example last sunday i rode to a park and did a 2 1/2 mile walk there) i left my bike for an hour, i took my latte lock and another very heavy cable lock (I carried it in my camel back) and locked my bike with both of those locks.

    so, rear rack bag, seat post bag, camel back (water holding backpack) all those are good places to put your lock.
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  3. #3
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    Apr 2006
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    I'm the only one allowed to whine
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    I have a u-lock/cable lock combo. Very heavy. I carry it in my pannier on my commuter bike.

    Haven't figured out yet how to carry it on my go-fast bike. Probably wrap my belt-pack straps around it and carry it (the u-lock only) on my waist.

    You can buy brackets to hold a u-lock in the front triangle of your bike frame. They take up the space of one of your water bottles, though.
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
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    3,932
    City bike: Inexpensive, heavy, bulky hybrid (but pretty). I have a u-lock (the new type, not the one with a circular keyhole you can open with a bic pen) that's pretty good quality, however I have no illusions: if someone wants the bike, it will be stolen, lock or not. Most u-locks take only seconds to break with the proper tools. I'm fairly sure chains are the same. The bike is pink. Maybe not too popular with male thieves, but I know there are female thieves. It's also unique (the company made only one of that color) and maybe a good bike thieves would realize that and not steal it to avoid problems. But I don't "expect" the bike to be there when I walk out. Some day, it will be gone. I heard from friends working in downtown Montreal that older road bikes of good quality were much less likely to get stolen than a brand new $100 Canadian Tire (think: Target) bike. Harder to resell, I guess...

    I carry the lock in a back pack if going for a long distance or slipped between the rear rack and the wheel if just for a few kilometers. The thingie to attach it to my bike didn't work, my tubes are too big.

    Road bike: Nothing fancy but very good components and wheels. Has never been locked (except when camping over night during a bike tour, on a guarded camping lot). I only stop if I'm with other people and one person will be watching for it while I go order inside the café (or the other way around), or I leave it outside at cafes that are organized for cyclists, but again, with a group. We will tangle bikes and helmet straps together just to make it impossible to just lift a bike and go, and sit accross the window, close to the door.

    If I'm on my own, with my road bike, I'm unlikely to stop anywhere I need to leave my bike outside... Even in the suburbs.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
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    2,024
    It depends where I am gong. At work, I just leave a kryptonite NYC lock on the bike rack, and lock it when I arrive. Those suckers are heavy, but after my last bike was stolen I was told also the most thief proof. I was told cable locks are next to useless, as they can be cut so easily. So, unless I am willing to carry a NYC kryptonite U-lock (say in a handlebar bag), I just don't leave it unattended. At rest stops on club rides we take turns wathcing the bikes. If we stop for lunch after, we eat at an outdoor cafe next to the bikes, stuff like that.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    WA State
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    Someone did a video study where in they locked up their own bike and then "stole" it, by cutting off the various types of locks that they used to lock it up with. They cut off or othewise opened every type of lock out there with out being stopped or caught..... They even opened a light pole, plugged a saw into an outlet in there and chopped off one of those big chain locks and no one said boo. Soooo I figure that I may as well only carry an honest person lock - all it does is keep those teetering on the edge honest. (this was after I saw a one homeless guy walk up with a bike to another homeless guy downtown - Guy one - I didn't know you had a bike, Guy two - startled look- Where did I get this??). I would never leave my racing bike alone anywere - locked up or not, but my rain bike and my Marin get locked up with a cable lock and I tend to not leave them anywhere for too long. If I were a commuter and regularly had to leave the bike somewhere all day I think I wouldn't feel safe unless I were able to bring the bike inside - like at the animal shelter I volunteer at they let me put it in the mail room.
    Last edited by Eden; 02-04-2007 at 03:26 PM.
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by mimitabby View Post
    I always carry a small "latte lock" in the pack behind my seat. .
    What is a latte lock?

    Pooks

    “Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”

  8. #8
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    Dec 2005
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    WA State
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    Quote Originally Posted by pooks View Post
    What is a latte lock?

    Pooks
    a little cable lock that is enough to lock up your bike while you run into the coffe shop for a latte.....
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

    visit my flickr stream http://flic.kr/ps/MMu5N

  9. #9
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    Jun 2006
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    Dallas
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    I wonder if that's what I have. A cable with a combination lock on it. The combi-lock is a long bar and you twist the numbers to the right sequence.

    “Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Indianapolis, IN
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    739
    sounds like you have the same type I have pooks. I don't know if you all can see in my avatar pic, but I wrap the lock around the head and top tube on my Navigator and that's where it stays. I've been known to take the bike into the vestibule at Kroger's and lock it right up to the freebie magazine/flyers rack while I pick up a few groceries etc. I alway make sure it's wrapped around the frame AND the handlebars though to make it a little more complicated for an HONEST person well, doggonit, I'm trying to insert a photo and it won't open the pic for some reason, but if you click on the link it's a bit of a closer look.
    Gotta be careful with the combo bar locks though, there's a little button so you can CHANGE your combo and if you accidently click that I've had to have a lock CUT OFF because I did that and get a new cable lock that bites and is embarassing to have happen (at least I was right in the same shopping area as my LBS)
    Last edited by mary9761; 02-06-2007 at 09:51 PM.
    Don't think of it as getting hot flashes. Think of it as your inner child playing with matches

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
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    I never carry a lock, I will not leave my bike in a rack.

    However, if I did carry a lock, I would put it in my seat bag, in my back pocket, or in a back pack.
    The thought of a lock rubbing on the purty paint work and arring or marking it is too much for my cycling 'vanity'.


    Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
    "I will try again tomorrow".


  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Flagstaff AZ
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    If I'm riding my good expensive bikes; I do not lock them. I either make sure I can take them inside with me; or I do not ride them. If I'm running errands, etc., commuting, etc., where I need to leave my bike somewhere, I take my older less nice bike and a cable lock with a regular keyed lock. I usually leave this lock set up at work on the bike rack so I don't have to carry the weight in, but if I'm carrying it, i.e. forgot to leave it at work; used it to go somewhere else after work, etc., I carry it in my backpack. Usually, when I'm on these commute, errand trips, I am out for something other than just riding my bike - so I have the backpack for carrying groceries, clothes to work, etc., etc.

    I could in pinch probably fit the cable lock and lock in a jersey pocket if I had to; that is most jersey pockets - but not some of the wimpy jersey pockets sometimes found in women's jerseys (but that is another subject).

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    Reporting from Moonshine Mountain
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    I'm with you, Raven. I don't carry a lock and would hate to have to.

    I live in a VERY rural area and our stopping spots are country stores dotted all around. We lean our bikes up against a picnic table or tree or whatever's available. One of us always keeps an eye on the bikes, but in all the years I have lived here I have not known anyone to have any trouble.

    That said.....this guy was in my neighborhood last Friday.....

    http://www.nbc29.com/Global/story.asp?S=6030695
    "When I'm on my bike I forget about things like age. I just have fun." Kathy Sessler

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  14. #14
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    Jan 2007
    Location
    Central NJ, a quick ride from the shore
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    Thumbs up

    Well - since I only have the one bike, it's the one I ride. LOL!!

    I'd hate to lose it. In fact I'd be heartbroken. That being said, it's not that great of a bike so I can't imagine anyone bothering. I think a solid chain & lock (not a cheapie from walmart but a city one) left on the bike rack will work for me. These chains are way too heavy to carry in any sort of pocket or seat bag and I don't wear a camel or back pack of any kind. No need to really, nothing to carry. Well except a chain and thus we are back to the beginning.

    Thanks for all the great suggestions.

    T.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Trondheim, Norway
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    I always have a backpack, at the very least a camelback with a bit of storage space. That's where the lock goes when I'm on the bike and in motion. I never trust the thieves to skip my bike because it's grungy or cheap or the neighborhood where I'm riding is safe. You would not believe how grungy and peculiar my first bike was when it got stolen -- rusty old 50's Schwinn one-speed, painted shrieking green with orange pasted-on flowers. And this was in a town with about twice as many bikes as inhabitants, so there were tens of thousands of better bikes to steal and pretty much nobody ever locked back then (1969). Still ... it got stolen, never to be recovered. My very first bike that I bought with my own savings at age 9.
    Half-marathon over. Sabbatical year over. It's back to "sacking shirt and oat cakes" as they say here.

 

 

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